Sunday, March 28, 2010

OUR FIRST REAL RECIPE POST

ok, so the other day I made a most delightful snack (not for the vegetarians out there, of course) and since we've been talking about posting our recipes up here for so long, I'm going to DO IT. here goes:

BEANS 'N BACON
(Crazy, I know.)

What you need:

can of beans (preferably black)
some bacon (at least 5 pieces)
optional: The Three C's: cumin, coriander, cayenne pepper

1. pour out most of the bean goo and cook in small saucepan, covered, over low heat, for at least 15 minutes. if you'd like, add the three c's. Not too much, just a little. Maybe a little more cumin than the others. (**black beans and cumin go really well together)
2. in the meantime, cut up the bacon into really small pieces, the smallest you can do. (This is before cooking it!)
3. when you're about 10 minutes into the bean cook time, throw them bacon bits into a pan and cook 'em up real nice. Crunch factor is up to you; I prefer them on the chewier side, but to each his own.
4. When the bacon's looking near-done, throw in those yummy, slightly gooey beans. Cook them altogether for a few more minutes, getting that delicious sizzling bacon fat all over the beans.
5. EAT!

(fucking delicious, right?)

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

WooHOO

Just got this email from MPP:

Dear Gabriel:

Today, California Secretary of State Debra Bowen
certified the Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010 for the November
ballot. This means that on November 2, Californians will finally be able to vote to end marijuana prohibition.

The groundbreaking initiative would make personal
possession and cultivation of marijuana legal for adults over 21 in
California. It would also allow cash-strapped cities and counties to tax and
regulate marijuana sales in order to reap millions in new tax revenues.

This historic proposition will finally allow California
to move away from the destructive policy of prohibition and toward a
more rational approach to marijuana. With talk of marijuana policy reform
already resonating through the halls of the state capitol, today's
announcement will certainly heat up the debate.

We're looking forward to educating the public about the
benefits of taxing and regulating marijuana in the months leading up
to November - hopefully you are too.

Please show your support by pledging to vote
"yes" on California's Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act on
November 2 by visiting, http://www.taxcannabis.org/page/s/pledge?source=mpp



Thanks for supporting MPP and sensible marijuana policy
in California.

Sincerely,

aaron Smith's signature

F. Aaron Smith
California Policy Director
Marijuana Policy Project

Daybreak, Daphnis et ChloƩ

Ravel. Think floating in orbit on mushrooms, over a star going supernova. That would be close.
Before and beyond filmscore...like a turn of the century Fantasia. Thank god for absinthe!

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

A Conservative Who 'gets it'

Read this guy...former fox speechwriter, needs a bigger mic!

Monday, March 22, 2010

I've seen a lot of terms being thrown around since health care's passage. I'm all up for political debate, but it needs to be debate within reason. So one question for everyone: How are freedom and capitalism synonymous? Answer: They're not. Why? Because freedom requires the ability to act freely. However, since you enter the system, not at the beginning, but at some point in the middle, freedom isn't free. If it were, food would be free, so you wouldn't have to work for it. In fact, all necessities would be freely available. Freedom is, according to webster's, "the absence of necessity, coercion, or constraint in choice or action"...does that sound like capitalism to anyone? I think not. First, we all have necessities that need to be filled. We all have to work at a job for necessities (water, food, shelter), we can not freely obtain them outside of the system. Two, we're all coerced by the rich who dominate the media and government into doing things against our best interest. Third, we're all constrained both by the government, and financial institutions. Capitalism does not provide freedom half as much as it enslaves. These are terms they're feeding you, coercing you to believe in. Capitalism and Freedom have never been synonymous, and our forefathers knew that. My message: Hey, 99 percent of the country, let's take it back from the top 1 percent. This has nothing do do with democracy/capitalism/socialism/republican/democratic, those are labels to distract you. No more talking points guys...

Sunday, March 21, 2010

here's the guy we all voted for

watch Obama. The last 10 minutes are especially powerful. He's really trying, guys. We need to cut him more slack and give him more credit.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Trouble

Senators share emission bill's details with industry groups (03/17/2010)

Darren Samuelsohn, E&E senior reporter

Lawmakers at the heart of Senate energy and climate negotiations revealed key details today of their legislative proposal during a closed-door meeting with major industry groups they are courting in hopes of winning over Senate moderates and avoiding an expensive advertising war.

Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) shared an eight-page outline of their draft legislation that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions over the next four decades, including provisions to limit business costs while ramping up domestic production of oil, gas and nuclear power.

According to several sources in the meeting room, the bill calls for greenhouse gas curbs across multiple economic sectors, with a 2020 target of reducing emissions by 17 percent below 2005 levels and an 80 percent limit at midcentury. Power plant emissions would be regulated in 2012, with other major industrial sources being phased in starting in 2016.

In a bow to industry demands, the senators' proposal would pre-empt U.S. EPA climate regulations under the Clean Air Act and halt dozens of state climate laws and regulations now on the books. Also, only facilities that release 25,000 tons per year of greenhouse gases must participate in the climate program.

Additional layers of certainty for industry come via a "hard price collar" that limits greenhouse gas allowances to between $10 and $30 per ton tagged to inflation, with an increase at a to-be-determined "fixed rate" over time. The legislation would also set aside a "strategic reserve" of 4 billion greenhouse gas credits that could be released into the market to help control price volatility fluctuations.

Overall, the bill will include eight titles: Refining, America's Farmers, Consumer Refunds, Clean Energy Innovation, Coal, Natural Gas, Nuclear and Energy Independence. And it will set up new nationwide standards for energy efficiency and renewable energy, as well as ideas on carbon market regulation crafted by Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine).

The senators collected their eight-page document from the industry officials before the meeting ended, and they declined comment on those details as they left the session. Nonetheless, several sources at the meeting confirmed the specifics shared by the senators.

"We obviously talked some substance," Kerry said. "We went through an outline of things we're thinking about."

Kerry said a full outline of the bill will be delivered Tuesday to a larger group of senators who have been working over the last year on the climate and energy issue. The senators also hope to send their proposal to EPA and the Congressional Budget Office by the end of next week for a five-tosix-week interagency analysis, although the timing on that depends in part on two legislative counsel staffers who are out on maternity leave.

"It's just the logistics of getting the language done," Kerry said. "So I'm not going to tell you exactly. But our target is somewhere toward that period of time or during the break."

The senators' meeting included about a dozen top trade associations, including representatives from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Edison Electric Institute and American Petroleum Institute. Several of those officials left the meeting giving the three senators credit for their effort.

"Directionally speaking, the way they're trying to conform and shape this bill I'd suggest is largely in sync with what most people in American industry think is the direction you're going to have to go if you're going to have a successful program," said Bruce Josten, executive vice president for government affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "Now there's a lot of ifs, ands and buts, but if you're asking for a broad statement, that's a broad statement."

John Shaw, senior vice president of government affairs at the Portland Cement Association, called the meeting's tone "very positive."

"I think many of the industry sectors are willing to work with the senators to achieve positive public policy results," Shaw said, "but the devil is in the details, and folks are very anxious to see those details."

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Helmut Newton






I don't know how this man and his work escaped me until now...but I am loving it!
Feast the eyes, and the mind....

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Swiss Cheese

Mindhole.
As if we needed more holes in our (Norwegian) cheese!

Sunday, March 7, 2010

False Facade

I approve of the digital age. Cool blog, too...

Dinner

Chicken Jalfrezi
Even more exciting than it sounds.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

dood, Scientology.

read this Times article. I especially like the part when they try to minimally explain what a Thetan is.

fucked up shit. I applaud you, defectors! Stay strong!

Friday, March 5, 2010

more distractions!

this is about crazy shit in famous old school paintings.

this is about real historical acts of badass revenge.



both of them are fucking sick.

Crazy Aunt, Love Her

I've decided to begin posting all of the crazy emails I get from my dear aunt Lucia in Ecuador.
She loves to send me links about aliens, UFOs, 2012, natural food and medicine, and conspiracy theories. For the most party, I skip or skim her emails, but from now on I will be making this information available to all of you. My intention is to open up her/others' theories for discussion at our late-night living room sessions. Ridiculous claims? Absurd theories? Who knows? It's for us to find out...

____________________________________________

Minimalism


Stereotypical Caj Banter...

this is what happens, Larry.

this is what happens when you fuck a stranger in the ass.

you're entering a world of pain.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Professional Procrastination

A world (literally) of distractions to last for days:

ATLAS OBSCURA: A Compendium of the World's Wonders, Curiosities and Esoterica

and yes, its as cool as it sounds.

Imaginative Utopias


Paolo Soleri was a student of Frank Lloyd Wright, and his pathbreaking concept of 'arcology' (architecture+ecology) envisioned minimal-impact urban colonies designed for sustainablity and efficiency, bringnig human and natural ecosystems into greater harmony. It's a bit of an idealist utopia at this pont, but its an interesting alternative to the vast suburban sprawl that we chose to dominate the American landscape.
Arcology came closest to reality in his Arizona desert colony, Arcosanti- worth checking out. I`m considering staying for a few months...I need something interesting to do after I graduate, and they are right around the corner from burning man. Any takers?
I know Real Estate is down- they chose Soleri's famous hexahedron colony design for their latest EP...a nice nerdy irony considering their name.
BEST MUSIC VIDEO

xxoo

Monday, March 1, 2010

Mind totally blown

Wow...

Destino from only one on Vimeo.


Really beautiful, made in 2003 by Disney, 58 years after Dali and Disney started. Watch and fade away.