Another Boulder adverse possession…

What is it with Boulder and adverse possession?

The problem started when new owners took down the privacy fence to enjoy the creek…

It’s a view worth seeing, Marshall said, which is why she decided to remove a 6-foot privacy fence from her backyard shortly after purchasing the home in 2006.

“I thought I’d rather look at the creek,” Marshall said. “I had no idea when I took the fence down that anybody would try to take (the property).”

But Mohammad Salim, who apparently has more money than common sense doesn’t like it that suddenly his yard is visible from his neighbors house. He also apparently found a judge/jury he shares his lack of common sense.

“Those guys want to see our backyard because it’s pretty; and they’re right, it is,” Mohammad Salim said Tuesday as he sat on his quiet back porch overlooking the rushing creek. “The privacy is what we want.”
Salim said he isn’t really interested in his neighbor’s land, just in maintaining the sanctuary his family has enjoyed for at least 26 years.

“We felt violated,” he said. “The issue is if you go into someplace and take away their privacy, how is that any different than taking away someone’s car?”

Salim said his yard, landscaped only by the natural, lush vegetation surrounding the creek environment, is now broken up by Marshall’s “manicured lawn.”

“It makes sense that the land stay in harmony,” Salim said. “We see ourselves as the stewards of the land.”

The last sentence explains it all.

As one of the commenter’s asked, was it a judge or jury trial? There’s no way I’d go to trial in an adverse possession case with a judge in Boulder County. My property is bordered by 6 other properties. If the new adverse possession laws hadn’t come into place I’d be talking with my neighbors to determine if they had any thoughts about my land.

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Vitamin D is good for you

New report on the effects of Vitamin D deficiency,

The conclusions are…

Men with a vitamin D deficiency (having 15 nanograms per milliliter of blood or less) had an increased risk for heart attack compared with those with a sufficient amount (having 30 nanograms per milliliter of blood or more) of vitamin D. “After additional adjustment for family history of myocardial infarction, body mass index, alcohol consumption, physical activity, history of diabetes mellitus and hypertension, ethnicity, region, marine omega 3 intake, low- and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and triglyceride levels, this relationship remained significant,” the authors write. Men with intermediate levels of vitamin D had a higher risk of heart attack than those with sufficient vitamin D levels.

“Vitamin D deficiency has been related to an increasing number of conditions and to total mortality. These results further support an important role for vitamin D in myocardial infarction risk,” the authors conclude. “Thus, the present findings add further support that the current dietary requirements of vitamin D need to be increased to have an effect on circulating 25(OH)D [vitamin D] levels substantially large enough for potential health benefits.”

Hat tip to Instpundit.

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Brownie Points

Before the Democrat’s do too much political posturing regarding “big oil”, they should exmaine the gallup poll taken May 19-21 of 2008.

This graphic sums up the publics changing perspective nicely, but the article is a must read.

click to enlarge!

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Republicans block Dem’s windfall profits tax

Great job!

The Democratic energy package would have imposed a 25 percent tax on any “unreasonable” profits of the five largest U.S. oil companies, which together made $36 billion during the first three months of the year. It also would have given the federal government more power to address oil market speculation that the bill’s supporters argue has added to the crude oil price surge.

Supposedly this will give the Democrats political ammunication for the November election…

The defeat affords Democrats another opportunity, going into the November congressional and presidential elections, to try to cast Republicans as siding with the oil companies at a time of record gasoline prices.

Color me skeptical, plus who knows where gas prices will be by then. As “they” say, “The cure to high prices is high prices.”

Also Newmark’s Door, along with the editor of Fortunte magazine believe that oil prices are headed for a “big fall”. I’m not in that camp as I don’t see where the supply is going to come from and there’s plenty of demand from India and China. That said, I admit it IS a possibility. Imagine a strengthening dollar, continued tough talk (and action) on inflation and conservation measures and the price of oil could definintely slide for a while.

I was out and around today in Boulder, there’s absolutely no doubt more people are riding bikes and walking.

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Environmental groups sue to protect polar bears….

from the dangers of oil drilling. Here are the groups you should be concerned with…

Polar bears are threatened — likely to become endangered — because their sea ice habitat has melted dramatically and computer models predict further losses, Kempthorne said. Summer sea ice last year shrunk to about 1.65 million square miles, nearly 40 percent less than the long-term average between 1979 and 2000.

and

Whit Sheard, of Pacific Environment in Alaska, said Bush administration officials have been so keen to grant offshore leases, they have not given proper consideration to the potential harm to polar bears.

Computer models, gotta love it. It would be so powerful if our US dollars went to US oil companies instead of going to foriegn governments. As I have noted before, I am NOT against alternative energy sources, but these sources need time to mature.

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More on Obama’s bad judgement here.

Why would Obama, in his first big personnel decision, choose a paleoliberal greedhead with a track record of failure? You tell me.

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No AIDs pandemic, no global warming crisis

Leave it to the Diplomad to lecture us on scientific concensus. I was going to give it a go, but thankfully he beat me to it.

Great job!

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Marxists, Socialists, Communists for Obama

In the “you can’t make this stuff up” category is the “Marxists/Socialists/Communists for Obama” section of Obama’s web site. I can certainly understand these folks might create their own web site, but for Obama to actually have this group on his own web site? The continual stream of bad judgement coming out of this guy boggles my mind.

Hat-tip to the Power Line guys.

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Abandoning the SAT

Crazy, but as you can imagine, in a community such as Boulder this is an idea that the liberals find quite attractive.

Thankfully there are voices of common sense regarding keeping the SAT as a good indicator for colleges. The conclusion is…

I sincerely hope that SAT defection is only a fad, limited to small high-end institutions. The arguments advanced by the as yet tiny band of top colleges or universities that are abandoning the SAT are empirically unfounded, if not downright fraudulent. When it comes to protecting their own academic standards, they may have any number of ways in which they can live without SATs, both in choosing whom to admit, and teaching them once they are enrolled. Unfortunately, however, the collegiate stratum from which SAT defectors come serves as a role model for the rest of higher education. Thus, the disparagement of the SAT as an admissions criterion by the top tier schools may set an unfortunate precedent for the rest, risking widespread debasement of national collegiate academic standards that are not all that high to begin with.

and the qualifications of the author are…

Peter D. Salins served as Provost of the State University of New York (SUNY) System from January 1997 to October, 2006, responsible for university-wide academic planning and standards, including admissions and instititional research. He iscurrently University Professor of Political Science and Director of the Graduate Program in Public Policy at Stony Brook University.

Hat-tip to Kimberly Swygert writing over at Joanne Jacobs’ blog.

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The “favor factory” still running full tilt

As Captain Ed explains, the pork keeps flowing, although the Democrats, primarily Reid and Pelosi, promised change. He concludes…

If the GOP had any sense, they would take this opportunity to declare an immediate and unilateral moratorium on pork and defy the Democrats to match them. They have an opportunity to take action on reform instead of just talking incessantly about it. Republicans will not win a majority in either chamber unless they demonstrate real leadership on real reform and demonstrate a clear difference between themselves and the Democrats on spending.

I disagree. There’s not enough time between now and November for the GOP to impress on undecided folks that they have changed their ways. In fact, they couldn’t convince me between now and November. A pox on both their houses. It’s disgusting and you can smell corruption everywhere.

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Jim Rogers on financials, the fed, airlines, oil and commodities

There is no supply of oil. The bull market in oil has years to go, despite large corrections that are sure to go.

The world is running out of known oil reserves.

A lot of commodities have come down pretty hard.

Low inventories of food.

Acerage devoted to wheat crop is below 30 years ago.

No major oil fields in 40 years.

European and Asian banks haven’t taken writeoff’s yet. American banks have written off in advance. Asian and European banks will writeoff over time as they go bad.

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Obama – “lightworker”

Here’s Betsy’s reaction…

A grown man wrote that stuff. And he has a job working for a major newspaper. In San Francisco, but still a professional writer actually produced that swill. It staggers the mind. All I can hope is that one day, when he’s older, Mr. Morford will be might embarrassed by all that rot.

If your curious, read her complete analysis.

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D-Day with todays media

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Welcome to American Math

Welcome to America….where people are actually having a serious discussion about whether teaching kids advanced math as soon as possible is a bad thing. Is it any wonder our country lags behind in math/science?

Read more about this nonsensical thinking over at Kitchen Table Math.

However, that’s nothing compare to this nutcase over in the UK that wants to stop teaching academic subjects that are “middle class”.

Instead of history, geography and science, Professor John White thinks students should “learn skills such as energy-saving and civic responsibility through projects and themes,” reports the Daily Mail. White believes that “traditional subjects were invented by the middle classes and are “mere stepping stones to wealth.” Which seems preferable to preparing students for poverty.

Makes one wonder about the decline of the West!

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Venezuelan’s want the dollar

Although the once almighty dollar has been falling against most major currencies, in Venuezla it is in high demand. As Jim Rogers says, go to the black market to see what a currency is really worth…

The government sets the official exchange rate at 2.15 bolivars to the dollar, but on the black market $1 is currently trading for around 3.40 bolivars, or 58% higher than the official peg.

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$200 oil and “ride the trend”

You can find Howards blog here.

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High oil prices, whose to blame?

Walter Williams comments on Congress and the oil company executives. His conclusion…

The true villain in our having to cough up $60, $70 or $80 to fill our gas tanks is the U.S. Congress caught in the grip of environmental extremists. But if reality is too difficult to swallow, we can continue to blame and support the congressional attack on oil executives, turn food into oil and think of other crackpot “solutions.”

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A recipe for high prices

US energy secretary Samuel Bodman has simple straightforward observations and recommended solutions on high energy (oil) prices.

The problem is…

Production has stalled since 2005 at 85 million barrels a day, while economic growth — particularly in China and India — has pushed demand ever higher, Bodman said before a meeting of ministers from the U.S., Japan, South Korea, India and China.

and the solution is to produce more and use less…

“We’re in a difficult position where we have a lid on production and we have increasing demand in the world,” he told a small group of reporters, dismissing the effects of speculation and unclear inventory levels and other factors on oil prices.

“I would devoutly hope we … see a reduction of the use of oil in the world on the one hand, and an increase in the supply so we can see some mitigation in the pressure on price,” Bodman said.

and he also suggests….

Bodman said he would likely urge China and other countries at the Japan meeting to slash fuel subsidies, which make gasoline cheaper for consumers — thereby giving them no reason to reduce consumption and allow prices to level off or drop. The International Energy Agency has estimated that oil subsidies in China, India and the Middle East in 2007 totaled some $55 billion.

At the same time, he urged nations to pay heed to an IEA report that the world needs $22 trillion investment in energy supply infrastructure by 2030 to meet rising demand, while developing alternative energy sources.

“We have a situation where we have these high prices and the only solution is to diversify your resources, diversify your sources of fuel,” he said, listing nuclear energy, natural gas and renewable sources such as wind and hydropower.

Note the variety of recommendations Bodman proposes. There isn’t a magic bullet, there is a summation of solutions that are larger than the whole. I think everyone agrees that using less fossil fuels is a good thing, but the correct path is to use all the tools at our disposal in an urgent fashion with all the doomsday global warming talk and wasted energy blaming “big oil”.

And transparency would lead to fairer pricing, and in my opinion less volatility in the pricing…

Lack of transparency in the oil market has also been cited as a possible cause of higher prices. Bodman said that while the United States and host Japan have been “diligent” in disclosing production and consumption data, some other countries need to do more.

Proponents of such transparency, including the IEA, say greater disclosure of accurate statistics helps markets set prices that more precisely reflect supply and demand. Underreporting of production, for instance, can drive prices higher as traders think supply is lower than it actually is.

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United Nations led by servants of dictatorships

Read the WSJ column on the new UN leadership.

The General Assembly of the United Nations voted this week to elect Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann as its new president. Readers with a long memory will recall Father D’Escoto (he’s a Catholic priest) as Nicaragua’s foreign minister during the Sandinista regime of the 1980s. He’s also the winner of the 1985 Lenin Prize. Only at the U.N. does that count as a recommendation.

The U.N. also voted to name the government of Burma – which otherwise has been busy preventing humanitarian assistance from reaching hundreds of thousands of its own needy victims of last month’s devastating cyclone – as one of the Assembly’s vice presidents. Only at the U.N. is this not considered an embarrassment.

If that weren’t enough, a U.S. official was present for the vote – which was by acclamation – when the U.S. could have at least protested the choice with an empty seat. Nor did the State Department make any effort to offer an alternative to Father d’Escoto, who ran unopposed. Somehow, we don’t think this would have happened had John Bolton still been ambassador.

Have I mentioned recently that the UN is full of idiot diplomats?

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D-Day part II

Read The Ordeal of Omaha Beach over at Power Line.

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