As Unemployment Rises, Workaholism Declines

Why is it that in the depths of the Great Recession, with editorial cartoonists hit just as hard as other newspaperpeople, the only one who seems to draw on the subject from the point of view of the unemployed, is Ted Rall? I don't get it. Too much identification with the oppressor? Puzzling. 

But whatever, as the kids say, he's still great…

Womenemployedmennot

Ansel Adams in Color

Hard to believe, but the great Ansel Adams had no confidence in his color photography, and so in his life published only a handful of the thousands of pictures he took in color. Even the one below (featured in a brief selection of his color work this week in The New Yorker) didn't make the grade.

So often artists aren't the best judges of their own work…

MonumentValleySF2copyPage125-thumb-465x365-19403

If It Looks like an El Nino, and Feels Like an El Nino…

,,,maybe it is an El Nino. After an unexpected and totally welcome 6.59 inches a couple of weeks ago, the air has been clear, soft, windless and warm…we hit a 97 a week ago, and yesterday 84.

The data also look convincing:

Here's a graph of warmth spreading along the equator across the Pacific, from a NOAA site:

Sstseptember09

And here's a suite of models, all of which show an El Nino/Southern Oscillation developing:

ModelforecastsforENSO

Okay, I'm convinced. Time to fix the roof and clear out the streambed…

How the Little Ice Age Reveals Our Climate Control

This month Harper's magazine turns its lead essay over to Stephen Stoll, a historian, who in "The Cold We Caused," delves into the history of climate to show how "nearly incoherent" are the arguments of the likes of climate change denier James Inhofe, Senator from Oklahoma, who continues to insist against the facts that we are in a "cooling period."

Inhofe concedes that the globe did warm after the Industrial Revolution, but doubts whether this warming was caused by "man-made gases, anthropogenic gases, CO2, methane."

Stoll turns the question around, asking: What would happen to carbon dioxide and methane if humans were to disappear? As is it happens, we have a reputable (if not indisputable) answer to that question from a scientist named William Ruddiman, at the University of Virginia, who in 2003 published a paper in the journal Climate called How the Anthropogenic Era Began Thousands of Years Ago (pdf).

Ruddiman argues that the so-called Little Ice Age, which took hold from approximately 1315 to l850, was the result of various horrific plagues and pandemics in the Middle Ages. As people died by the tens of millions, agriculture in much of Europe, Asia, and Central America all but collapsed, forests and jungles regrew, the levels of CO2 and methane in the atmosphere fell, winters lengthened, pack ice spread southward, and global temperatures dropped dramatically. 

Though some climate change deniers have pointed to this as evidence that greenhouse gases are good, Stoll argues that's a shallow interpretation:

In fact, however, this medieval tale reveals the enormous capacity of
human beings to shape their environment, whether unwittingly or
deliberately. If our crop-planting, animal-herding,
forest-and-savannah-burning ancestors could trigger the rapid cooling
of the atmosphere through their sudden absence, then we can achieve the
same effect by abandoning other practices. The cold we caused does more
damage to Inhofe’s position than any finding by the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change.

Stoll sees the positive side of this argument. As the responsibility of wealthy, developed nations for "a just climate" becomes undeniable, "the litany of rationalizations" holding the global poor to blame for their suffering may finally become untenable, giving them a chance to rebalance the scales of justice.

Stoll's faith in the power of rationality might seem a little naive, except that he foresees a time when "the very poor are filing class-action suits against wealthy nations for reckless carbon output."

And just this week, according to the Wall Street Journal's Law Blog, the conservative Fifth Circuit [Federal] Court based in New Orleans has just allowed lawyers for landowners in Mississippi to file suit against coal companies and oil companies for damage suffered during Hurricane Katrina. The court noted that the Supreme Court has already upheld the right of the EPA to regulate carbon dioxide emissions under the Clean Air Act, and affirmed the causal link between emissions and global warming, and, possibly, ocean temperatures and more powerful hurricanes.

Though no one expects the this ruling on "standing" to lead to quick decisions against coal companies, an expert in class-action suits did predict it would lead to many other claims against emitters being filed. Legal observers recall that the tobacco industry defended itself against damage suits successfully for years, but eventually was forced to stop denying that cigarette smoking is harmful to health.

So Stoll's argument seems not so far-fetched after all. As they say in courthouses around the world, the mills of the gods grind slow, but they grind exceedingly small.

The Fabulousness of Unemployment

As circulation continues to crater, the Los Angeles Times laid off another forty or so staffers this week, including numerous veterans who somehow survived the last two years of terror at the beleaguered newspaper.

Among them was a dashing columnist named Tina Daunt, who has reacted by going (on her blog at least) with sheer fabulousness. Oscar Wilde would applaud. And judging from the comments on the site, Oscar is not alone…and the L.A. Times is crazy to let her go. 

Tinadauntunemployed

End of the Road for Zombie Arguments on Global Warming?

Readers may already have encountered the kerfuffle over a new book by the best-selling Freakonomics team, Stephen Dubner and Steve Levitt, who in a single chapter manage to stand up and push forward most of the brain-dead –aka zombie — arguments on the subject of climate change.

It's sad to see such smart guys make such dumb arguments. Really. A couple of hours of Googling on these issues, or a couple of days of interviewing, and they would have at least known not to repeat claims that have already been thoroughly discredited.

To pick just three: one, they claim that scientists in the l970's were as worried about global cooling then as they are about global warming now. This was disproved by a landmark collaboration between reporter John Fleck and two prominent scientists, who published together a paper in the American Meteorological Society bulletin called "The Myth of the l970's Global Cooling Scientific Consensus." (For more, see the abstract in the link.)

Two, the Freakonomics team alleged that a well-known climatologist from Stanford, Ken Caldeira, claimed that carbon dioxide was not the villain in the story of global warming, which was flat wrong — a total misquote, as Caldeira himself made clear as soon as he was asked about it.

And three, they claimed that the problem could be relatively easily solved with a Budyko's Blanket of sulfur piped into the Arctic stratosphere, an enticing "solution" to an overheating planet akin to "solving" a fever by putting an icepack on a patient's head. Even scientists who think the time has come to begin researching geoengineering, if only to buy ourselves time to avoid disaster, stress that these are desperate measures for a desperate situation. The Freakonomics team makes it sound like a really cool project, like a science fair exhibit, only with a real planet.

As a columnist for The Economist put it:

There was a time when I encountered contrarian arguments like those
made by Mr Levitt and Mr Dubner and thought, hm, that's really cool. In
recent years, when I encounter such arguments, my tendency has been to
think, yeah, that's probably a lot of hooey. If journalism is about to
affect a turn away from contrarianism, it's none too soon.

Well, we can hope.

More Climate Data for the Fire

As usual, Toles explains the big picture with ease, leaving the rest of us to squabble over the details: 

Tolesonclimatedata

To be specific, the last couple of months have brought several grim climate studies to the fore, none of which has raised so much as a ripple of consciousness, as far as yours truly can tell.

For example: the recent drought in the Southeast was small potatoes in climactic history, according to a study by Richard Seager of Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. another example: even if nations do act to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the planet will warm by over six degrees Fahrenheit this century, which is nearly double the amount scientists believed we can tolerate without suffering catastrophic damage. 

Or, to put it a little more memorably perhaps, the existence of the famous cedar of Lebanon is imperiled, because desertification is coming to about 60% of the country, according to local experts. 

This conflict between the overwhelming weight of scientific data, and the apparent indifference of the public, brings to mind a question that top paleoclimatologist Richard Alley sometimes asks — when do scientists "bang the table" and demand that legislators and the public pay attention?

Again Falls This Quiet Persistent Rain…

According to the National Weather Service, this huge storm that hit California last night was the biggest precip to reach the state at this time of year in forty years (sorry, I can't reference that, because I can't find/remember where I read it). Hit central CA harder than us in SoCal, but boy was it welcome.

In celebration, here's a lovely poem by the late Robert Creeley on the subject, published in l991, and below, a picture of our little stream…running for the first time in October in a decade!

THE RAIN

All night the sound had
come back again,
and again falls
this quiet, persistent rain.


What am I to myself
that must be remembered,
insisted upon
so often? Is it


that never the ease,
even the hardness,
of rain falling
will have for me


something other than this,
something not so insistent—
am I to be locked in this
final uneasiness.


Love, if you love me,
lie next to me.
Be for me, like rain,
the getting out


of the tiredness, the fatuousness, the semi-
lust of intentional indifference.
Be wet
with a decent happiness.

   

IMG_4228

A Conservative Voice of Reason on Climate Change

Lindsay Graham, the senior senator from South Carolina, co-authored an op-ed over the weekend published in the New York Times, in which he called for the passage of climate change legislation.

Graham of course is a Republican, but he defied "the Party of No" cliche, arguing sensibly that (according to the Huffington Post):

I think the planet is heating up. I think CO2 emissions are damaging
the environment and this dependence on foreign oil is a natural
disaster in the making. Let's do something about it. I'd like to solve
a problem, and if it's on President Obama's watch, it doesn't bother me
one bit if it makes the country better off.

For this he was excoriated at a townhall meeting in Greenville, in which more than one angry white man demanded to know why he was "getting into bed with John Kerry." The rage (on YouTube) is scary, complete with insults such as "traitor" and "a Democrat in drag." Graham defended his position:

On climate change, Graham said he is working with Kerry because he
wants to expand off-shore drilling and increase nuclear power to reduce
the country's dependence on foreign oil. He said some caps on
greenhouse gases are a reasonable trade-off to get a bill through
Congress.

Craziness.


Ojai Mourns Bear Shot, Killed Downtown

Over the weekend a large, peaceful bear wandered into downtown Ojai, ended up in a tree, and after much human hubbub and confusion, was tranquilized and killed. Published reports conflict as to what happened.

A story in the Ventura County Star, quoting state fish and game officials, reported:

At about 10 p.m. Saturday, a warden shot the animal twice with a
tranquilizer dart meant to immobilize it, and once the animal was on
the ground, officials loaded it into a pickup truck, drove it out of
town, and euthanized it, he said.

On the Ojai Post, on the other hand, Chris Nottoli (a friend) reported in an extensive timeline that the bear was killed by falling, tranquilized, out of a tree in his yard.

10:30pm: Fish and Game are at the base of the tree. The bear is huffing. I think I just heard them dart him. Twice.

10:33pm: Wait! rubber bullets? They're shooting the tree. In total darkness. All the trucks have been moved up.

10:38pm: Their hitting him with the spot lights. WTF is going on? Cops are putting on gloves.

10:40pm: They shot him again. Rubber bullet. Again. Dart- direct hit on his ass.

10:50pm: Bear fell out of the tree. Unconscious. They're shooting him up with more.

10:55pm: You guys remember the original King Kong? That's what it
looked like. He slowly let go his grip, pin wheeled over backwards then
crashed thru branches 40 ft. to the ground.

11pm: Dead.

The eyewitness account sounds more convincing to me, but judge for yourself. The story has caused a great deal of unhappiness in Ojai — some people are putting flowers on the site where the bear died.

By chance the poet I quoted yesterday, Robert Peake, also lives in the neighborhood, and with Chris, Chris's partner Deb, and his own partner Val, wrote a thoughtful account of how this tragedy might have been handled better. Personally, as Chris said, I think simply not calling the cops might have helped, although much depended on the bear's ability and willingness to return to the woods. 

[photo of the late bear via the Ojai Post, courtesy of Erin Ellwood]

Ojai-bear-medium