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THE TOP STORY: House poised to win state-budget staredown
By Chris Graham/AFP
Republicans in the Virginia House of Delegates stared down the Virginia
Senate and Gov. Mark Warner in 2004 - and blinked. Don't expect them to
blink away their position on taxes this time around. "Maybe they think
that the House will cave in - but the House isn't going to do that.
We're very adamant and very unified - and we're right," House Speaker
Bill Howell, R-Fredericksburg, told The Augusta Free Press.
House Republicans have steadfastly maintained their stance on tax and
fee increases that Warner's successor, Gov. Tim Kaine, and a bipartisan
coalition of Republicans and Democrats in the Senate have said are
necessary to provide a needed fix to the state's overloaded
transportation system.
INSIDE ... Will Goodlatte run alone in November?
By Chris Graham/AFP
David Layman isn't giving up on the idea that Sixth District Democrats
will be able to field a challenger to Republican Congressman Bob
Goodlatte this fall - but it's safe to say that the prospects of that
happening are not looking good at this point. "Our focus at this time
is still on finding a candidate," said Layman, the chair of the Sixth
District Democratic Committee - which has until June 13 to nominate
someone to contest the seven-term incumbent. Other Democrats in the
district are readily conceding the point that the party will not be in
a position to place a candidate on the ballot.
ON THE FRONT ROW: Barry and the Babe - the debate rages on
By Chris Graham/AFP
Barry Bonds is black. Babe Ruth was white. Now that we have that
established, we can tune into the national discussion that has been
ongoing for some time now regarding Bonds' pursuit of the Bambino's
spot on the all-time home-run list. And you had thought it was all
about the two players' places in the history books. "It's interesting
that we're talking about Babe Ruth - whose numbers speak for
themselves, but we have to keep in mind, for starters, that he was
playing in a time when baseball players of color could not compete
against him ..."
BEST SEAT IN THE HOUSE: O'Connor building bright future for UVa. baseball
By Chris Graham/AFP
It is the best of times for Virginia baseball. The program is coming
off back-to-back NCAA regionals appearances - which had never been
accomplished before at the University of Virginia - and it appears
certain that coach Brian O'Connor's crew is headed back to the
postseason next month. The good news for UVa. fans - it's only going to
get better. "It will be exciting to see how this team does down the
stretch run ..."
SPORTS: The Sound and the Fury
Topics include ... Sweet and Lowe-down; The 10 Most
Overrated Sports Records; Heat juice; Bring back baseball and 'rasslin;
How the mighty have fallen; and The Meineke Who Cares? Bowl.
GOLF THINGS CONSIDERED: Tension-free makes it a swing
By John Rogers
It seems to be the instinct of most of us non-tour players to grip a
club like we've gotten a hold of the neck of an IRS agent. It's like
we're arm wrestling with the club - fingers, wrists and forearms
straining with our effort to hit that little ball higher, and
straighter and farther. But the tension in our swings is a big part of
the reason we don't hit the ball more like tour players. Many of the
golfers I see on a daily basis have an instinct to control
their golf shots by manipulating the club with their hands and arms.
Almost every beginner squeezes the club until their hands turn
patriotic: red, white and blue.
THE MEDIA BEAT: The return of payola
By Chris Graham/AFP
And you thought payola was something that went out with the 1950s. "All
of these stations are licensed to operate in the public interest - and
if they're going to put either information or music or whatever out
there, and it's being paid for, then it needs to be clearly labeled as
such, so that people can know that it's advertising," said Craig Aaron
of the Washington, D.C.,-based Free Press, which is monitoring the
Federal Communications Commission investigation into possible payola -
the payment of money or services in exchange for airplay ...
CARLY AT THE MOVIES: Blub-blub, gurgle-gurgle
 By Carl Larsen
I guarantee that your popcorn will be soggy and your brain will be
water-logged by the time you reach the end of "Poseidon," director
Wolfgang Petersen's remake of the popular 1972 disaster flick.
This one is a disaster in more ways than one. It takes place on a CGI
cruise ship, and shortly after the big boat goes belly-up, seven
"average" citizens band together to climb up to the bottom of the ship
and escape.
THE FORUM: A week in the world of politics
Topics include ... Eavesdrop this; Of, by and for whom
again?; A way to fight the gay-marriage amendment; The furor over the
flu; Perspectives on gas prices; and Miller delineates views on
Iraq.
ECOLOGY AND YOU: Peak Oil will change our lives
 By Erik Curren
Last week, I attended a conference on Peak Oil in Washington, D.C. With
about 250 others, I heard that the world is probably reaching the top
of petroleum production right now. This would mean a future of ever
declining supplies and rising prices. It was scary. But there was also
a strong message of hope. Most speakers agreed that Peak Oil could be
the biggest problem America faces today - bigger than terrorism,
health-care reform or immigration.
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Peak Oil will change our lives
Ecology and You
Erik Curren
The Augusta Free Press
Last week, I attended a conference on Peak Oil in Washington, D.C.
With about 250 others, I heard that the world is probably reaching the
top of petroleum production right now. This would mean a future of ever
declining supplies and rising prices. It was scary. But there was also
a strong message of hope.
Most speakers agreed that Peak Oil could be the biggest problem
America faces today - bigger than terrorism, health-care reform or
immigration. And because it could disrupt our peace and prosperity in
ways most of us had never imagined, Peak Oil could even be bigger than
global warming in the short term. And it will affect these other
issues, too.
Yet, if it's such a big problem, why don't we hear about much about
Peak Oil in the media? I'll come back to this. But before that, I'd
like to share three big things I learned about Peak Oil.
First, its absence from the 11 o'clock news doesn't mean Peak Oil isn't real.
Dozens of leading petroleum geologists as well others in the oil
industry and in government have agreed that we are nearing the twilight
of cheap oil. Chevron has launched a campaign to inform the public that
oil is depleting. The U.S. Army is planning for permanent oil
shortages. Even the U.S. Department of Energy put out a 91-page report
on the subject in February 2005.
"As (oil) peaking is approached," the report said, "liquid fuel
prices and price volatility will increase dramatically, and, without
timely mitigation, the economic, social and political costs will be
unprecedented. Viable mitigation options exist on both the supply and
demand sides, but to have substantial impact, they must be initiated
more than a decade in advance of peaking."
Sobering, indeed.
Second, oil has become the top issue in world politics, and it will likely remain there for decades to come.
Despite official explanations that the U.S. invaded Iraq out of
self-defense or to free the Iraqi people from an evil dictator,
Operation Iraqi Freedom is really just a mission to protect U.S. oil
sources, according to Michael Klare, author of the 2004 book Blood and Oil.
Unlike other commodities such as copper or coffee, oil has long been
securitized. That means governments will go to war to protect supplies.
The British securitized oil just before World War I. President Carter
made oil security into official U.S. policy on Jan. 23, 1980, after the
Iranian revolution disrupted supplies.
Since then, under the so-called Carter Doctrine, all subsequent U.S.
presidents have made guarding "our" oil in the Middle East an issue of
national security. Saddam threatened U.S. suppliers in Kuwait and Saudi
Arabia, so he had to go. Iran could be next, and then, who knows? The
U.S. could fight decades of future wars just to guard oil. We could
even see a new cold war, this time pitting the U.S. against the world's
second-biggest oil user, China.
According to Klare, in the last 20 years the U.S. military has
essentially been turned into a "petroleum-protection force." Think
about that the next time a young person you know wants to enlist.
Third, alternative fuels are not a silver bullet that will allow us
to continue our current lifestyle unchanged. That's because no other
energy source known today can even come close to providing the level of
cheap and convenient energy that oil has given us for a century.
The problem is biggest in transportation. Current sources of power
like coal and nuclear, though terrible for the environment, will
provide electricity for now. Clean power from solar and wind can help
in the future. That will keep the lights on in homes and offices
But cars, trucks and planes do not run on electricity, despite some
failed experiments like GM's EV1 electric car. Instead, they burn
liquid fuels - gas, diesel and kerosene. And since adequate battery
technology to convert vehicles to electric power is nowhere on the
horizon, most transport is going to continue to need liquid fuels for
the foreseeable future.
Oil now provides 97 percent of all fuel for transportation. And
despite lots of excitement about other liquid fuels such as hydrogen or
biofuels, replacements for oil in aircraft and road vehicles won't come
on-line for decades, if ever. Why? It's because most other sources have
a much lower energy return than oil.
Energy return works like financial investing. Just as you have to
spend money to make money, so you have to use energy to get energy.
Oil gives the best return of any energy source so far. For every one
barrel we use in finding, drilling, refining and shipping oil, we gain
up to 100 barrels. That's like investing $1 and getting $100 back.
By contrast, other sources give much worse returns. Some kinds of
ethanol actually take more energy to produce than they give. And
hydrogen is not an energy source at all, but just an energy carrier -
it always takes more energy to produce hydrogen than you get by burning
it. That's like investing $1, losing it, and then having to pay a few
cents extra to cover costs.
Since there's no high-yield energy source coming to replace oil,
we'll probably have to give up many of our cars, trucks and planes in
the future. That means we'll travel less and buy fewer goods from far
away. This will be a revolutionary change in our current lifestyle.
That brings me to the question of why we don't hear much about Peak Oil in the media.
The White House must have known about it for years, since both Bush
and Cheney were oilmen, but they're saying nothing. They must think
that Americans won't like to hear that our lifestyle is threatened by
Peak Oil. So, instead of urging us to live with less, as they should be
doing, our leaders peddle dangerous or fanciful schemes to get enough
energy to feed our current wasteful consumption - at least until the
next election.
But I think they're wrong. Americans have been willing in the past
to make sacrifices when our leaders have called on us to do so in a
time of great crisis. We pulled through the Great Depression and World
War II because we were challenged, and we rose to the challenge.
We can pull through Peak Oil, too, but the public must know the
truth. The good news is, the truth is starting to come out. In the fall
of last year, Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R-Md.) and a bipartisan group of
House members formed the Congressional Peak Oil Caucus. Since then,
they've been speaking widely on Peak Oil and trying to pass legislation
to help us prepare.
So what was the message of hope at the conference? It was this: In
crisis lies opportunity. And whatever Washington does, people should
start preparing for Peak Oil themselves. That means finding a way to
live that uses less energy. Indeed, Peak Oil might be just the chance
many of us need to go beyond a lifestyle of consumption, and to
reconnect with nature, with our families and with our communities.
I, for one, am inspired and energized by this project. I am eager to get started.
Learn more about Peak Oil at www.energybulletin.net/primer.php.
Erik Curren is a regular contributor to The Augusta Free Press. Curren is the author of Buddha’s
Not Smiling: Uncovering Corruption at the Heart of Tibetan Buddhism
Today. More information about Curren's works is available on-line at www.alayapress.com. The views expressed by op-ed writers do not necessarily reflect those of management of The Augusta Free Press.
What do you think? Share your thoughts on this story at letters@augustafreepress.com.
(Published 05-15-06)
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