the Outfit

Biodiesel, Wind turbines, Permaculture, Sustainable lifestyles, and our new Renewable Energy Workshop

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BMN Brian’s Boat Studio

Brian's Morning Newsletter

February 5th 2010

Brians-boat-studio

Brian's rendition of Monet's painting – Boat Studio


Good Morning
It isn't perfect in my eyes, nevertheless my painting, The Boat Studio, is done. The whole process of creating this painting was wondrous, absolutely relaxing, and totally enjoyable, that's how I know it is complete. The result for me, looking at the painting gives a pleasing feeling, and Nell agrees, but she is always supportive, so please tell me what you think.

You can see that I love extravagant coloration. Indeed unusual color interaction is one of the aspects which drew me to Impressionism in the first place. It was good to start with animals, but I soon tired of so-many shades of brown.

 Above is another work in progress, beaver # 2 alongside two of Sara's painting and one of Nell's. I'm not satisfied with the beaver, and may continue to fix stuff, or I may just move on, I don't know, I haven't decided.

Above you can see the results of an artist not quiting, I couldn't say the modifications helped either of these paintings, although from a technique standpoint I'm happy with the result. Learning how to hold the brush, how to make brush strokes, what colors and shades do what to the depth of the piece, all very important stages of development, not that I'm at all developed, but it wouldn't be nearly as enjoyable if I didn't feel I was making progress.

Indeed, the larger canvas is easier to paint on. With the small canvas, (beaver #1 and fox are painted on eight by six inch canvas boards) I was only able to use very small brushes. Now, with the twelve by sixteen inch canvas I was able to try so many more brush styles and sizes.

I want to add one more photo of the boat studio using a flash, because it may show the colors better.

Yes, I do believe the real coloration shows up better, at least on this LCD display it looks closer to the way I painted it.

Well, some of you are probably wondering what happened to all of my renewable energy projects, as I haven't written of them in a few months. True true, I haven't, but then with Jackson's house fire, and the resultant energy expenditure, I haven't had time to do anything with our wind turbine, which is still shut down until I can build a proper copper connecting bar for the 12 deep cycle batteries. Also we are still trying to save for an inverter, but other things keep coming up.

The biodiesel is also on hold for Winter, so I am very pleased that I got the paints, canvasses and brushes as a present, it is perfect and I couldn't think of a better way to spend these snowed-in days than this.

So that's pretty much it for this week,
Y'all have a good weekend
Brian Rodgers
P.S. Even after the issues with copy and pasting stories this week, I can't help but post two more I find very helpful, for our journey through the fog of life.

 

 

Stories 

 

 

 

 

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Patriot Act: Here we go again!

 

Dear ACLU Supporter,

I’m writing to alert you that votes on re-authorizing key parts of the Patriot Act will happen in Congress any day now. And, once again, fear-mongering and scare tactics are being used to block genuine Patriot Act reforms.

This time, opponents of reform are seizing on the attempted Christmas Day airplane bombing to insist that we don’t need to bring the Patriot Act in line with the Constitution. Some are even calling for toughening up the Patriot Act with still more freedom-stealing provisions.

You and I have to make sure Congress knows that Americans want Patriot Act reform and that we’re totally fed up with these scare tactics that don’t make us any safer.

Tell your representatives in Congress to vote for reform and stand up to fear-mongering.

Acting Together

It is time to bring the Patriot Act in line with the Constitution. Tell Congress to demand reform and stand up to fear-mongering.

Take Action

 

 


There’s more evidence than ever that Patriot Act abuses are a real and present danger and are eroding our freedoms at an alarming rate.
 
Recently, the Department of Justice issued still another report documenting widespread FBI abuses of the National Security Letter provision of the Patriot Act. More than 2,000 times, the FBI illegally collected telephone records by invoking terrorism emergencies that did not even exist or simply sweet-talking phone companies into turning over records.

Please don’t stand idly by and let Congress allow these kinds of abuses to continue.
 
Please tell your representatives in Congress to demand reform and stand up to fear-mongering.

The ACLU has fought to reform the Patriot Act since the day it passed, and – no matter how long it takes – we won’t quit until we win.

Action in Congress could come any day. Please let your representatives know how strongly you feel right now.

Sincerely,

Anthony D. Romero Anthony D. Romero
Anthony D. Romero
Executive Director
American Civil Liberties Union

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Why you should care about vaccines and autism

In 1998, the British medical journal The Lancet published a study that, indirectly, led to the first outbreak of measles in the British Isles in decades. How could one study in a journal that’s mostly read by scientists and doctors have such a far-ranging impact? The study argued that autism symptoms could be explained by the use of the Measles-Mumps-Rubella (MMR) vaccine.

Since then, an entire movement of parents and activists sprung up — including, most notably, Jenny McCarthy — who were convinced that the cause of their children’s autism were nefarious pharmaceutical companies who were hiding the truth so that they could sell more vaccines. In 2005, activist and lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. published a piece in Rolling Stone alleging that there was a conspiracy of pharmaceutical companies and the U.S. government to repress evidence of the vaccine-autism connection.

This past week, however, The Lancet retracted the study. Although the scientific community had rejected the study’s conclusions for years, The Lancet was finally forced to formally retract the study when Britain’s medical regulator, the General Medical Council, sanctioned the lead researcher behind the study, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, for not disclosing payments he got from lawyers representing parents whose kids had received the vaccines and for conducting unnecessary, unhealthful tests on children.

The study, which was based on tests done on all of 12 children and were followed up by a statement by Dr. Wakefield recommending that parents not get the vaccine, caused a plummet in vaccinations in the UK, well past the 95% threshold needed for so-called “herd immunity.” In England, vaccination rates for measles, mumps, and rubella cratered in 2004 when only 80% of children were vaccinated. Subsequently, there were 1,000 cases of measles in the U.K. Measles, of course, was previously thought to have been eliminated in the modern world. There were even more cases of mumps: in 2004, there were more than 16,000 reported mumps cases in England and Wales, a fourfold increase over the previous year.  In 2008, “Fourteen years after the local transmission of measles was halted in the United Kingdom,” there was a measles epidemic.

The irony is that in the developing world, parents and kids would love to have access to a measles vaccine. In 2008, some 164,000 died of the disease despite a vaccine being available; 95% of those deaths were in poor countries where there isn’t the medical infrastructure to distribute the vaccine. Unfounded concerns over the MMR vaccine seem to be a first-world luxury.

The populist movement against vaccines, and more specifically, the totally bogus claim that the MMR vaccine causes autism, is not just another example of a great number of people misunderstanding science — it’s a real movement that has real consequences for the kids whose rights to health care are being violated by their sadly misinformed parents. The vaccine delusion has even seeped into politics. In 2002, Indiana Republican Dan Burton took up the cause, saying that “My only grandson became autistic right before my eyes — shortly after receiving his federally recommended and state-mandated vaccines.” But obscure Indiana congressmen aren’t the most prominent leaders of this movement: celebrities are.

Jenny McCarthy, who became famous posing for Playboy, has directly blamed vaccines for causing her son, who was otherwise developing normally, to develop symptoms connected with autism. Since then she has started a foundation (which supports Dr. Wakefield) and has become an advocate for untraditional treatments for autism such as chelation therapy. Chelation therapy is in widespread use among alternative medicine practioners and removes heavy metals — like mercury — from the body. There is, not surprisingly, no scientific evidence that chelation therapy does anything to mitigate the symptoms of autism.

McCarthy’s situation, minus the relentless and reckless self-promotion, is a perfectly representative example of why the vaccine-autism connection has such a powerful grip on so many. The symptoms of autism often first manifest themselves as missed developmental landmarks, such as not being able to speak. Parents often describe, or retrospectively “remember,” a radical shift in their child’s behavior. They go from functioning, happy and normal to distant, sick and alien.

That some parents become aware of their children’s autism at around two years, as in the case of McCarthy, means that they are more likely to attribute their child’s condition to the MMR vaccine, which is often given to children at 15 months. Up until then, their child appears to be “normal,” and then their expectations are totally upended and they look for explanations. And since many people just see vaccines as something they need to get their children without any understanding of why they’re doing so, it is easy for them to scapegoat  the vaccine for such a dramatic apparent change in their child. Or, as McCarthy puts it, after her son was given the MMR shot, “soon thereafter — boom — the soul’s gone from his eyes.”

The widespread mistrust of vaccine has obvious victims in those children who get mumps or measles unnecessarily. But it’s also bad for autism research and advocacy. For one, the attention that goes into quack notions like the autism-vaccine connection and quack treatments like chelation therapy could go into research looking into genetic causes of autism and behavioral therapies. There is also an entire movement — the neurodiversity movement — that doesn’t see autism and related autism-spectrum disorders like Asperger Syndrome as diseases but instead as alternate brain wirings that should be respected and accommodated. To neurodiversity advocates, the autism-vaccine story is both wrong and offensive because it implies “that their condition is a side effect of poisoning.”

While The Lancet’s retraction of its original study will probably do very little to convince those who are blaming vaccines for their children’s autism, it is a step in the right direction. Maybe now people can have an appreciation of the good that vaccines have done and accept that a great change in the expectations for their children is not the fault of any conspiracy or great malfeasance, but like so many other of life’s disruptions, autism is something that just happens.

 

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