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August 1, 2008

Link Think: Still Number 1

Another day, another study detailing the twice-daily hell that passes for a commute in many California cities. As the LA Times' traffic blog Bottleneck reports:

Study finds California urban congestion still tops the nation
The Reason Foundation, the group that promotes libertarian values, just released its annual highway report. California, predictably, had the worst urban freeway congestion -- along with Minnesota and North Carolina -- but the 9th fewest deficient bridges. The state's urban freeways also ranked 48th in terms of their condition. Only New Jersey and Hawaii were worse in that category.

(A tip of the hat to LAist for that Bottleneck link.)

Bottleneck goes on to point out that 2-hour commutes and essentially unsusable roads can make for strange political bedfellows, the small-government libertarians at Reason apparently having been, well, driven to embrace the relatively bigger government implied by traffic solutions like congrestion pricing. "Although the Reason Foundation certainly has a distinct political viewpoint," Bottleneck notes, "there really isn't much politics in their report. The group is also a big proponent of congestion pricing, as are many other organizations across the political spectrum."

Some conservative activists (Grover Norquist, in particular) have long dreamt of a government so small it can be safely drowned in a bathtub, but California's unique mix of urban congestion and yearly confrontations with Mother Nature (earthquakes, mudslides, fires, marauding bears) make us a state where government will always need to be robust enough to enforce building codes and pick up debris. As one diarist at the Daily-Kos-style state political blog Calitics argues:

It really is remarkable what serious attention to building codes has done. Not too long ago yesterday's earthquake would have been a disaster - today it's a blip. California has recognized the problem, taken steps to constantly improve and innovate, and made sure that the regulations stayed stringent, so that developers would just have to find other means to reduce costs. The fact that the epicenter was around Chino Hills and Diamond Bar, relatively new areas with new buildings that were constructed according to the strictest building codes, was only a further testament to that. The after-action reports from the 1989 San Francisco quake and the 1994 Northridge quake were taken seriously and applied in this case. [full diary]

According to the Reason study, our earthquake-ready bridges are high on the nations list of "fewest deficient," and although that sounds (to my ear, at least) like praising someone for being the "least ugly," it's good news and proof that preparedness efforts are producing results. Now we only need to figure out how to keep paying for all of it:

Thousands of state workers were told to stay home Friday under an order by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger aimed at cutting expenses for California's cash-strapped government, but a lawsuit filed by a union claims the governor is overstepping his authority. [Full story]

California's projected budget deficit will hit $22 billion this year, another #1 for us. Figures.

--Gary Dauphin

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July 26, 2008

Link Think: One Greece Per Day...

... is about how much oil the US military consumes ever 24 hours. Earlier in the week, we ran an item about how California uses more gasoline than China. This set us on a hunt for comparative oil consumption figures, which led us to this tidbit on Politico.com:

The Biggest Oil Guzzler? The Pentagon
With wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and troops spread around the world, the Department of Defense is the nation's biggest oil consumer, burning 395,000 barrels per day -- about as much as Greece.

The Air Force is the SUV of the military. Its thirsty planes burn more than half the fuel supply for the entire U.S. military. It's received $1.5 billion in new relief from Congress for fuel -- and last week still had $400 million left on its credit card.

[...]

Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), who formed a Defense Energy Working Group, seized on the issue in 2004 after learning that the Army's Stryker combat vehicles got only 5 miles per gallon of gas.

He cited national security as another reason to conserve fuel.

"Here is our current defense posture," Israel said. "We are borrowing money from China to fund our defense budgets to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to fund our military to protect us from China and the Persian Gulf. It is an insidious vulnerability." [full item]

What's that line from Oliver Stone's JFK, again? Right: "It's a mystery wrapped in a riddle inside an enigma! The *bleepin* shooters don't even know!"

Got any good tips for Daydreaming's Link Think? Share them with us here.

--Gary Dauphin

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July 23, 2008

Link Think: LA (End) Times

A tip of the hat to LA Observed, which was crowded this morning with downbeat vignettes from the Los Angeles media landscape, including the move of iconic LA music mag Arthur to Brooklyn, poetic goodbye emails from laid-off LA Times staffers, and this "Editor's Note" from Los Angeles Magazine's Kit Rachlis on the prospect of a Los Angeles with no Times:

Paper Rout

Nobody disagrees that newspapers face a frightening set of challenges: a generation of 20- to 35-year-olds who get their news for free from the Web; the migration of advertising to the Web but not to newspaper sites; advertising rates on the Web that are 1/10th to 1/20th what newspapers charge; and now an economy that is in near recession. Any one of those factors would be daunting, but together they represent the most radical disruption the industry has ever faced. Even papers with committed ownerships, like The Washington Post, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal, are struggling. What's required is something not usually found in American corporations: the strength to weather at least four or five more years of uncertainty; a willingness to experiment like crazy; and a belief that what's being provided is more than just a business. The Times, on the other hand, has chosen to slash the paper and invest too little too late in the Web. It is hard to imagine a worse course. I will miss the Times, but the truth is that when I pick up the paper every morning, I miss it already. [full item]

Got any good tips for Daydreaming's Link Think? Share them with us here.

--Gary Dauphin

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July 22, 2008

Link Think: All Your Gas Guzzling Are Belong To Us

Daydreaming is introducing a new feature where members of the Day to Day team will be periodically posting some of the thought-provoking, relevant or plain strange links we come across on the web. We're calling it "Link Think," and we have to confess to borrowing the name from blogger and ethnomusicologist Wayne Marshall, who organizes links under the moniker "Linkthink" on his most amazing music blog wayneandwax.

Today's installment of Daydreaming "Link Think" is from Wired (with a tip of the hat to Boing Boing):


Amazing Stat: California Uses More Gas than China

Given all the news coverage about the rise of the Chinese economy, you could be forgiven for thinking that the world's most populous country is hogging all the world's resources, while the developed nations are fighting for scraps.

But, at least with transportation fuel, you'd be wrong. California alone uses more gasoline than any country in the world (except the US as a whole, of course). That means California's 20 billion gallon gasoline and diesel habit is greater than China's! (Or Russia's. Or India's. Or Brazil's. Or Germany's.)

[...]

One more choice statistic: gasoline usage in California has increased 50 percent, that's 6.7 billion gallons, since 1988. [full item]

Can you imagine a worst statistical feat for Cali? Most ashtrays? Most non-recyclable plastic used? As the Wired item goes on to explain, the gas factoid was buried in the California Energy Commission's State Alternative Fuels Plan, which came out last Christmas. The plan has yet to be updated, but even accounting for a drop in gasoline consumption as a result of recent spikes in prices, don't expect California to give up the title of global gas guzzling king any time soon.

(Also, those of you wondering about this post's title should refer to this handy Wikipedia entry, which explains an internet meme that some of us fondly remember as the ALL YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US Craze of 2001. Usually linking to Wikipedia is a journalistic no-no, but the best place to research a web meme is, of course, the web.)

Got any good tips for Daydreaming's Link Think? Share them with us here.

--Gary Dauphin

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