Archive for December 7th, 2006


Owens Valley gets their water back

The City of Los Angeles stole their water 93 years ago. Yesterday, with the turn of a valve, huge amounts of water will now flow back into the Owens Valley, and this area, which had become a dust bowl, will now begin to be restored to what it had been.

The court battles to make this happen took a long time, and the City of L.A. fought it every inch of the way, until a judge mandated they act. The politics of water are perhaps the most brass-knuckled in all of the southwest.

This tidbit.

The two Los Angeles aqueducts deliver about 430 million gallons a day to the city.

Virtually all the water for southern California, including L.A. and Orange County, is piped in from hundreds of miles away, mostly from the Sacramento delta and the Colorado River, which seems a quite mad and unsustainable system, doesn’t it?

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System of a Down releases Armenian genocide documentary

System of a Down - Screamers movie

Stepan Haytayan is the grandfather of Serj Tankian, the lead singer of System of a Down. Haytayan is a survivor of the Armenian genocide where 1.5 Armenians were slaughtered by Turks in 1915.

The band has made a documentary about it, Screamers. It deals with the genocide and the continued refusal of many to accept that it happened.

Official movie website

Documentary feature examining why genocides keep occurring — from the Armenian genocide in 1915, to the Holocaust, Bosnia, Rwanda and now Darfur — through the eyes and music of the Grammy award-winning rock band ‘System of a Down,’ based in Los Angeles, whose members are all grandchildren of genocide survivors.

Successive Presidents and corporate interests have conspired to turn a blind eye to genocides as they are happening – whether it be Iraqi Kurds in the 80s, Rwanda in the 90s or Darfur today. After the Holocaust, we may say ‘never again’ — but we don’t mean it.

YouTube video, with System of a Down live.

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Be prepared

From comments on Scobleizer about the tragic death of James Kim.

To all who wander out in the winter.

It is well advised to place a survival pack in the trunk of your car. Even a candle can keep you from freezing to death if used with the proper training. Even the best of the best can be caught on the side of the road in winter. Being prepared can prevent such needless loss. My heart goes out to the family. However, my logical mind tells me to scream out to those who travel in snow country to get the training that can save lives.

At a min. read this.
May God be with the family left behind.

The document is “Montana’s Take-along Winter Survival Handbook,” a 26 pg pdf filled with highly useful information.

As mentioned before, a whistle can save the day. Heard an amazing story about this. Two backpackers were way in the back country. One gets a broken leg. They use their whistle. One ridge away a mule train hears it, immediately diverts and comes. On another ridge, a park ranger on horseback also heard it. Within an hour, in isolated country, they had full aid and help. That would not have happened without their whistle.

I’ve done a fair amount of backpacking. The land can be beautiful and inspiring but also utterly unforgiving if you make a mistake.

Update: Kim made a “superhuman effort” trying to find help. After walking on the road for a few miles, he went down a ravine, apparently thinking to follow the creek to civilization.

That used to be a recommended survival tactic, but it has fallen out of favor because people who try it usually become more susceptible to hypothermia.

Heart-wrenchingly, he died in an impassable ravine with cliffs on both sides. Had he stayed on the road, he would have found a lodge that rescuers had been checking frequently. They said the route he took was extremely arduous and taxed even them trying to get to it and that his effort was “superhuman.”

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Keeping passwords safe at public computers

Here’s how. Type a few characters of the password, then click someplace else, and type a few more characters. Repeat until password is done. You’ve now interspersed enough gibberish that a keylogger can’t grab the password.

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