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It’s Not Easy NOT Being Green

Someone posted a comment on BigTrip.TV:

I’m interested to know what you’re doing to offset the carbon emissions from this “trip”.

I love that he put the word trip in quotes, as if it’s somehow suspect and not really a trip at all. Surely our true intention is to destroy the planet as we know it with our harmful carbon emissions. I don’t care to argue, so I replied with a joke, “We’re going to eat more cows.”

We live in a time where environmental fascism is being pushed so hard and so often, that thinking, logical people are bending over and giving into global, irrational, unscientific peer pressure. You can’t turn on a television anymore without hearing environmentalist nonsense about being green to save the planet. The planet is not in danger.

As a thinking person, I can’t base my opinions about the environment and global warming on emotional arguments like those offered by Al Gore and his allies in Hollywood. My gut feeling is that their arguments are nonsense, and oh you cannot imagine how much, I would love to ignore these people and just go with my gut.

My gut instinct is based on simple logic. If scientists cannot accurately predict the weather next week, they also cannot predict the weather next century. It’s the same logic I used to discount disaster theories about Y2K. When everyone was worried and spending millions of dollars on solutions, I changed the clock on my computer to see what would happen at midnight, January 1, 2000. Nothing happened, so I knew nothing would happen anywhere else, and I was right.

I can’t rest with simple logic, though, because the people making arguments based on emotion appear to be winning public support. In order to continue to believe what I think is true, I have to spend time reading the science behind the arguments to see for myself it the emotional arguments have scientific validity.

The emotional argument is that the scientific community has reached the consensus that global warming is a reality and it’s caused by human activity. Global warming is necessarily bad, and since it is caused by humans, it can be corrected, but only if we act now before it’s too late.

There is nothing scientific, rational or even reasonable about that argument. To begin with, scientific fact isn’t determined by consensus. I worry about the state of science education if we don’t remember what we learned about the difference between law and theory in science.

It is a fact that the existence of global warming and its causes are based on climate models that could turn out to be accurate, but could just as easily turn out NOT to be accurate. It is also a historic fact that warmer periods in the past have resulted in global economic prosperity, so global warming, if it exited is more likely to be good for us than bad for us.

It is not, however, a fact that global warming exists. The planet hasn’t warmed since 1998, and 2007 was cool enough to offset all warming that has taken place over the past century.

One of my favorite presidents in history is Teddy Roosevelt. He loved nature and he lead us to set aside parts of our nation to be preserved in a natural state. Nature is good. Pollution is bad. Protecting nature is good. Making people feel guilting for using resources is evil.

Rather than bowing to environmental fascism, religious fundamentalism or any thought system not based on reason, I choose to embrace logic and balance. I have full confidence, when we go too far as humans, a little something God built into nature called homeostasis will bring everything back into balance.

My favorite climate scientist is Dr. Roy W. Spencer. He just released a book explaining climate science. It’s called Climate Confusion. It’s based on science not emotional arguments and I highly recommend it.

If you read this and disagree, feel free to post scientific research that contradicts what I’ve written. I would love to read it, but I’m not going to get into an emotional argument with anyone about science.

Wiki Geek Brief

So, I have an idea and I want to see if anyone is game. Here goes…

Researching and writing The Brief usually takes us half a day or more. Shooting takes about 30 minutes and post production (editing, graphics, compression and uploading) takes about three hours. Check the Twitter transcripts. It’s pretty well documented.

This week, we’re slammed because we have an unscheduled trip to New York on Thursday and Cali has a speaking gig on Wednesday.

What’s the likelihood some friends of the brief would like to submit some stories to wiki {at} geekbrief {dot} com? We’re talking completely written stories with an attached product graphic or screenshot and links to sources so we know we’re not plagiarizing.

It seems like a fun experiment. If you’re interested in playing along, write a story about a gadget, Web application, game or piece of software. Length should be about five sentences long (keep the brief in Geek Brief). Include graphics or screenshots and links to your sources. Send it via email to wiki {at} geekbrief {dot} com.

You’ll be putting words in Cali’s mouth, so gold stars go to writers who are funny and still wholesome. Cali will edit you just like she edits me, but you’ll get the credit on the show and links in the shownotes on GeekBrief.TV.

One time, I worked at a non-profit organization where I had the opportunity to write a speech for Laura Bush. Hearing your words come out of someone else’s mouth is magical.

Ultimately, this experiment could lead to writing work for a future Geek Brief Gadget Blog…I’m just saying!

Neal’s Chewy Bloody Mary Mix

I call it a Chewy Bloody Mary because it has tiny little chewy chunks of vegetables in it. To make it you’ll need:

  • 1 Quart of Campbell’s Tomato Juice
  • 1 Large Lemon
  • 4-5 Celery Stalks 
  • 4 Cloves of Garlic
  • 5 Tbps. of Worcestershire Sauce
  • 5 Tbps. of Pickle Juice
  • 4+ Tbps. of Trappy’s Red Devil Cayenne Pepper Sauce
  • Salt
  • A Food Processor

Juice the lemon and pour juice into the food processor along with the Worcestershire Sauce, the Pickle Juice and the Pepper Sauce. Puree the garlic cloves and celery stalks.

Pour the pureed mixture into a pitcher with the tomato juice. Salt to taste. Mix and refrigerate over night.

The mix is excellent and refreshing with or without vodka. I typically drink it without.
 

Using Levelator with Final Cut Pro

Max Murphy is a teen podcaster who produces a show called Mac News Weekly. He’s a HUGE friend of GeekBrief.TV

At the end of Max’s latest episode, the audio on the credits is a lot louder than his audio on the show. I used to do that all the time on Geek Brief. Levelator is an easy way to keep that from happening. I’m posting this for Max, but other folks might find it useful too.

I Used to Sing Gospel Music

Tonight American Idol started with a worship song. I was a little blown away and a lot impressed because Simon doesn’t seem friendly to Gospel. When AI contestants have sung gospel songs in the past, Simon called it, “indulgent.”

I posted my surprise on Twitter. @KevinPorter asked if I thought there was something wrong with that. I dropped the nugget that I used to be a Praise and Worship leader. Some Twitter people were surprised and I realized that I never posted the YouTube video of me singing Southern Gospel on Christian TV here. Here ya go! (I’m the one on the left.)

FYI, a Praise & Worship leader, for those outside the club, is a lead singer/music director at a charismatic/non-denominational church.

 

My Twitter Rules

Twitter is the first social Web phenomenon I’ve embraced without putting Cali Lewis in between me and the rest of the world. I’ve followed people conservatively, usually after they’ve added value to my Twitter experience through positive @ replies. There are some people I’ve followed on Twitter like Jason Calacanis and Robert Scoble who I love, but they tweet too much for my taste, so I’ve un-followed them. I prefer following people who only tweet about 10 - 20 times a day. Otherwise my pages get overwhelmed by one or two people.

My personal Twitter etiquette dictates that I try to only tweet once an hour at the most. I only will @ reply once or twice per original tweet. My goal is to add value or be relevant without dominating the space. The exception is late at night when I’m missing God.

I would like Twitter to provide a way to group people I follow. There are some very chatty people I love, but I don’t want to always see there multitudes of chat replies. I HATE that the only solution, for now, is to un-follow them.

When I load the page I like to get a snapshot of what most of the people I’m following are doing, not a page filled with @replies from a single person. At the same time, I don’t want to suggest that people @ reply less. It just isn’t for me.

For now, I’m going to not follow people who I’m extremely interested in. I hope my un-follow is only temporary. I want to group people based on how much they tweet because I want the Twitter information snapshot effect, but I still want to see what friends who tweet a lot are up to.

Final Cut Pro

Final Cut Pro is my favorite application because I learn something new almost every day. The app. does something, though, I’m not sure how to manage. It writes files to my scratch disk and then leaves them there.

Once every two weeks or so, I go into my Final Cut Pro Documents folder and delete, delete, delete. It ads up to over 100GB every two weeks.

  • When I delete something from FCP, why do the files associated with it stick around?
  • Is there a setting I should change in preferences?
  • Will I ever learn all I need to learn about FCP (rhetorical)?

The 4 Books I’m Reading on My Kindle

One of the best things about the Amazon Kindle is that it allows me to have several books with me at all times. Right now I’m reading four:

The E-Myth Revisited was recommended by my friend Paul Colligan. It’s about running a small business and the difference between the ones that succeed and the ones that fail.

The Big Oyster: History on the Half Shell is by my absolute favorite historian, Mark Kurlansky. He also wrote the epic, unbelievably compelling book, Salt: A World History. He takes a subject like Oysters or Salt and wraps history around it. Salt is a history of the world. Oysters is really a history of New York City.

The Year of Living Biblically, by A. J. Jacobs is the story of A. J., a secular Jew who decided to literally interpret and follow the rules in the Bible for a year. The book is often funny, often touching, and often deep.

One Red Paperclip: Or How an Ordinary Man Achieved His Dream with the Help of a Simple Office Supply, I’m in fund-raising mode for The Big Trip, so that’s gotten me interested in whacky Internet ideas that have worked for people. One Red Paper Clip is the infamous story of how one guy started with a Red paper clip and traded his way up to a house.

Operation Pixel Baby

Cali and I both grew up poor, but blessed. Cali grew up connected to an amazingly supportive Italian family and I grew up raised by Baptists who introduced me to Jesus and home grown tomatoes.

We’ve been married nine years and we’ve put off having a kid because we have an amazing relationship. We’ve never had an argument…ever and the big fear is that having a kid might be the factor that changes that.

For our Big Trip, we started a site called PaidByPixels.com. It’s similar to the principal of buying a brick in a pathway to support your college. You buy pixels to support our trip and get ads galore on PaidByPixels.com and on our network of Web sites. We call it the Pixel Board.

We don’t need nearly all of the pixels to sell to fund the Big Trip, but we need most of them to sell. Cali said tonight, if we sell all of them, we can have a kid after the trip. I’m pretty sure I can convincer her to get started on the kid mission about half-way through.

People have always said that you can’t wait for everything to be fine finically to have a kid because things my never be okay. Cali grew up in a struggle and she doesn’t want to raise a kid that way. I’m not opposed to admitting that I need your help convincing her. She loves me, and she loves y’all.

When people don’t get this Web 2.0 world we’re living in, I wonder if they want to connect to people at all. To us the connection we feel to our GeekBrief.TV friends is more real than the connection we have to anyone in the flesh-and-blood world. That’s why I’m sharing this mission with you guys and not the natural fam.

Supporting The Big Trip

We’ve talked a lot on various channels about our plan to take GeekBrief.TV on the road for a year. We’ve named the road trip, The Big Trip, and the goal is to get started sometime this summer. We’ll be shooting GBTV as usual, but we’re also going to be producing travel stories like this one we shot at the Fish Wharf in Washington, D.C.

Our friends are supporting The Big Trip by buying pixels at PaidByPixels.com. Several people have asked us for a Web badge they could use to show support for the trip, and we aim to please:

It should link to http://www.bigtrip.tv. Here is the code, for your convenience:

<a title=”I Support The Big Trip!” href=”http://www.bigtrip.tv”><img src=”http://www.bigtrip.tv/assets/bigtripbadge.png” alt=”" width=”175″ height=”175″ /></a>

Thanks in advance for your help promoting the trip!