Category: News

  • Property Taxes: Savior or Satan?

    Are property taxes heroically keeping state and local economies afloat or villainously prolonging the recession? Both.

    Kim Rueben from the Tax Policy Center celebrates property taxes for the first reason. She explains that property taxes are slow to come down as real estate prices decline. As a result, people are stuck paying higher property taxes than the new market value of their real estate would imply. Explaining what she learned at a recent Tax Policy Center conference, she says:

    Nationally, property tax revenues have yet to fall both because the levy tends to be backward-looking (it takes a while for assessed values to catch up with reality on both the upside and the downside) and because local governments can raise rates. The strength of the property tax was the main driver of the small positive growth in overall state and local taxes for the fourth quarter of 2009. This was a theme in many of the presentations. New research by Byron Lutz, Raven Malloy and Hui Shan illustrates that house value declines don’t necessarily lead to lower property taxes, and when they do, it can take a while. With luck, by the time property taxes do dip, sales and income taxes will be recovering. The good news is that if property taxes could stand up in this recession, which was both deep and caused by a housing collapse, they can stand up to most crises.

    That’s certainly one way to look at it. Good for those state and local governments for getting more money in tax revenue than they should be. Now there is a smaller chance that they’ll default, or crawl to Washington and plead for a federal bailout.

    On the other hand, however, isn’t this a grave injustice for property taxpayers? Many of these people have already seen their real estate decline in value substantially — in some areas the decline approaches 50%. So if someone now has a home that’s worth $100,000, is it fair that the homeowner owes property taxes that assume it’s worth $200,000? The percentage decline in value will be proportional to the amount people are now overpaying in taxes.

    The last thing these frustrated homeowners need is another reason to consider walking away from their home. Not only are many Americans stuck with paying a mortgage for more than their property is now worth — but they’re paying excessive taxes as well. This definitely makes strategic default look even more attractive.

    Then, there’s the effect on the recession. If these people weren’t paying that money as taxes, they could be stimulating the economy. Spending would be higher, businesses would grow, and employment would improve. While the state and local governments certainly could use this money, it’s hard to justify providing the government with more money at a time when the private sector so desperately needs it.

    This reveals a problem with property taxes. Their sticky nature leads to their unjust application when real estate values decline — or rise — quickly. They oppose economic cycles, which will make bubbles bigger and recessions more severe. This contrasts with income taxes or sales taxes. It’s impossible to ultimately over- or under-tax people based on their income or spending, because the taxes adjust dynamically as those variables change. That’s one reason to favor these alternatives to property taxes.





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    United StatesProperty taxTaxIncome taxReal estate

  • Street Etiquette – Item Etiquette: The Waistcoat Video

    Everyone could learn a thing or two from the Street Etiquette guys, especially now that various style guides across the blog landscape have been giving you suspect advice. In this edition, the waistcoat gets the nod as how one can wear it with various pieces such as denim, sneakers, ties, and other accessories. It’s not about a waistcoat vs. vest debate, but more about the proper way of incorporating the item to your style. In addition, the SE boys head out to New York City’s midtown for a nice style video.

    Watch the video after the jump.

    Item Etiquette : The Waistcoat from Street Etiquette on Vimeo.

    Source: Street Etiquette


  • Matias Duarte is Google’s new User Experience Director for Android

    Matias Duarte

    As an update to our previous post about Matias Duarte, one of the major contributors to the creation of Palm’s webOS, leaving Palm, Engadget has received confirmation that Duarte has joined Google and their Android OS.  Duarte is now the User Experience Director for Android, working with the head of Android Andy Rubin.  Rubin and Duarte have worked together in the past on Sidekick, so we’re sure that Duarte’s transition into the Google will go smoothly.  While this is a huge loss for Palm, we’re sure that HP has some talent that they can put behind webOS to replace Duarte and help to make webOS better than it already is.

    Via Engadget


  • Gay Fetish Site Recon.com launches iPhone app

    While the big Steve said that you would have to go to Android for your porn fix, I guess he didn’t mean you would have to go there for help hooking up with like-minded leather fans.

    In a first for the App store, gay fetish hook-up site, Recon.com, has managed to get their iPhone app approved for release. The company has said that they “invested a lot of effort in designing an application that ensures that [they] walk the right side of the line as far as content and imagery is concerned.” which is why they were able to get through the app store approval process. Really, it’s just a location-based chat service.

    The free app uses your GPS to show photos of guys nearby, allowing you to chat with them and… well… I’m sure you can figure out the rest.


  • Hi Lux Pico Projector phone for $174? OK, I’ll bite

    This Chinese phone is trying desperately to look like a Vertu but features one of the most massive pico projectors I’ve ever seen.

    The NCBC 888 phone with a built in pico projector takes media on a mobile phone to the next level. Anyone who has ever had to stare at a smallish screen (even if it is up to 4 inches) knows that after a while there eyes will begin to tire. Not with the NCBC however, as you are talking a mini projector with you wherever you go. Anything from watching movies with friends on the bus, to giving quick media presentations to colleges is possible. The phone also has a TFT 2.4 inch screen with responsive touchscreen control, a 1.9MP camera, allows WAP and GRPS internet connection, comes with up to 8GB of memory courtesy of a microSDHC card, and can act as two phones in one by use of dual SIM ports with dual standby.


    You can get these little beauties for $172 and it has two SIM card slots, just in case you needed to make two calls at once. It’s a little corny-looking, but $172 for a pico projector is pretty rockin’.

    Product Page


  • LSHTM Welcomes New Director

    The School is delighted to announce that its new Director will be Professor Peter Piot. He will take over the role from Professor Sir Andy Haines in September.

  • Career First Says Jennifer Aniston

    Reports are saying Jennifer Aniston’s career is in danger with all her films falling down. And because of this, former friends star Jennifer is pushing away her dreams of becoming a mommy for future. She just wants to concentrate on her career right now. Her New Year resolution for 2010 was to get pregnant but apparently her dreams are going to be just dreams now.

    According to some insiders, she said, she wants to be a mother either by adopting a kid or having her own child. So it would not be a problem to adopt a kid in future, but getting pregnant after certain age is not considered safe. With the failure of her new movie “Bounty Hunter” which was a romantic comedy, she is thinking if her career is in danger. And that is the reason why she wants to give high priority to her career right now.

    Jen dated many guys but none of them wanted to become her baby daddy, so she must have thought of adopting instead. “After her fling with Gerard fizzled, Jen took stock of her life. As much as it bothers her, she came to the conclusion that having a baby alone is biting off more than she can chew.”

    Related posts:

    1. Jennifer Aniston going for Direction
    2. Jennifer Aniston: Someone to Share Family
    3. Amy Adams Welcomes her Baby Girl

  • Trevor Hoffman to resume slow, painful pursuit of 600th save

    http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/ept_sports_fantasy_experts__28/ept_sports_fantasy_experts-527032716-1274966880.jpg?ymgdANDDwd1hD06V

    Brewers manager Ken Macha is apparently ready to restore Trevor Hoffman’s(notes) ninth inning privileges, which will allow the Hoff to continue his agonizing historic march toward career save No. 600. What a thrilling time this must be for Milwaukee fans!

    On Wednesday, Hoffman pitched a scoreless seventh inning in the Brewers’ 5-0 loss to the Astros. He allowed a single to Hunter Pence(notes) and a walk to the Big Puma, but managed to escape with his dignity. He did not record a strikeout. 

    These were Macha’s postgame comments, via the Journal Sentinel:

    Manager Ken Macha said Tuesday he might give Hoffman one more outing
    before moving him back to ninth-inning duty. But after the game tonight,
    Macha was non-committal about that situation.

    "That is two good outings in a row," said Macha. "I’ll talk to him
    tomorrow and see how he feels about himself."

    It seems pretty unlikely that Hoffman will say to his manager, "I’m cooked. I’m 42. Maybe you should give Danny Kolb a call." Hoffman is clearly back in the saves mix.

    Don’t launch Carlos Villanueva(notes) just yet, though, if you have room on the roster. Let’s give the Hoff a chance to re-lose the closing gig. He’s allowed runs in eight of his 15 appearances so far this year, and Wednesday’s effort was hardly a vintage performance. Nothing is settled yet in the Milwaukee ‘pen.

    By the end of the season, Hoffman blog posts will likely outnumber Hoffman saves by a wide margin. The current Vegas line is blog -7.

    Photo via US Presswire

  • Dough Reinhardt On Paris Hilton’s Gunpoint

    Paris Hilton has been troubling her ex-boyfriend Doug Reinhardt with phone calls. According to the reports, she is mad over the news that her ex-boyfriend whom she dated for more than a year is now dating Miss USA Rima Fikah. And it is also being heard that, she wants him back and she willing to do anything to get him back, ooops!



    Paris freaked out when she heard Doug was talking to Rima at Canes Film Festival and since then she is calling him every now and then and she says she wants him back. Her mom has been trying to convince her, and according to some reports, Doug is over it and he doesn’t want to be with Paris.

    After bombarding her ex-boyfriend with phone calls, Paris claims that she loves being single and very busy to be jealous on any other relationship or something like that. She also said, she is enjoying being single and she is getting thousands of calls, but she is not ready to be with anyone. Paris said. “ she is concentrating on her family and work, may be a year later she will think of it, right now she is busy for any relationship”.

    Related posts:

    1. Casey Reinhardt’s new reality show
    2. Janet Jackson’s new Haircut
    3. Busy Philips in ‘Cougar Town’

  • Verizon reportedly ended intership for kid who snapped this pic

    Motorola Droid Shadow

    You mean you can get fired (in this case, it was an intern whose stint ended all of a week early) if you find an unreleased phone and take a picture of it, which your "friend" sends to a tech blog? Go figure. Discuss. [via Gizmodo]

    This is a post by Android Central. It is sponsored by the Android Central Accessories Store

  • $40 Million Wedding for Prince William

    According to the new issue America’s Star magazine Britain’s Prince William is all set for the most expensive $40 million wedding with his long time love Kate Middleton. According to the reports, it is going to be a fairy tale wedding.

    They have eight page of reports where all the details about their nuptials, guest lists, Kate’s gown and her surprise gift for William everything can be found. Not only this but other details have also been mentioned in June 7 issue of Star Magazine.

    According to Nicholas Davies, the author of William: the king of 21st century, William has said, he is ready for the wedding after his 28th birthday which is coming in next month. Some insiders say, audience will not be disappointed with the wedding ceremony. They will get to see expensive gowns, lavishing bouquets, expensive jewelry. According to some reports William is planning to give the 18 karat sapphire and diamond engagement ring to Kate which he got it from his late mother Diana.

    We all have a royal wedding to see and talk about it for months and months!!

    Related posts:

    1. Kate Middleton: England’s Future Queen
    2. Secret Marriage Michelle Ghent Howard: Terrence Howard Weds Michelle Ghent in January
    3. Casey James Mugshot: Arrested for DWI

  • WebOS Designer Matias Duarte Leaves Palm For Google: Will He Make Android Nicer? [Google]

    All Things D is reporting that Matias Duarte, Palm’s Senior Director of Human Interface and User Experience and the lead designer behind the beautiful WebOS UI, is leaving the recently-acquired company for a new post at Google as Android’s User Experience Director. More »










    GoogleWebOSMatias DuarteSearchingSearch Engines

  • Hypersonic Jet Screams Through the Stratophere at Mach 5 | 80beats

    Yesterday morning, about 70,000 feet over the Pacific Ocean, the Boeing-designed X-51A Waverider “scramjet” set a new record. Reaching Mach 5 (almost 4,000 miles per hour), it wasn’t the fastest jet flight, but by burning for over 200 seconds it became the longest flight of its kind. The previous scramjet record, held by the NASA X-43, was 12 seconds.

    A scramjet is similar to a simpler engine called a ramjet, but faster. The engines on most commercial jets have turbines to push air inside, but a ramjet is basically a tapered tube. As air flows through it, the shape of the tube compresses the air and, once the engine mixes this air with fuel, it ignites.

    Unlike well-understood ordinary ramjets, which slow the air passing through them to subsonic speeds, the X-51 is intended to maintain combustion in a supersonic internal airflow — hence the name scramjet, for supersonic combustion ramjet — a feat often likened to “striking a match in a hurricane”. [The Register]

    Since it needs moving air to fire, a ramjet can’t start from a standstill. Yesterday, a NASA-operated B-52 Stratofortress took the unmanned jet under its wing and dropped it at about 50,000 feet. Then a solid rocket booster accelerated the X-51 to about Mach 4.5. Then, on its own power, the scramjet climbed 20,000 feet, accelerated to Mach 5, and burned it engine for a total flight time of about 200 seconds.

    “We are ecstatic to have accomplished most of our test points on the X-51A’s very first hypersonic mission,” said Charlie Brink, a X-51A program manager with the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. “We equate this leap in engine technology as equivalent to the post-World War II jump from propeller-driven aircraft to jet engines.” [U.S. Air Force]

    NASA’s X-43A scramjet still holds the record for fastest jet engine flight, achieving about a 12 second run at Mach 9.6 in 2004. But the X-43A used hydrogen, which would require huge tanks if the jet found commercial use. The X-51A does not have this liability; it uses an easier-to-carry hydrocarbon fuel.

    Joe Vogel, Boeing’s director of hypersonics, said, “This is a new world record and sets the foundation for several hypersonic applications, including access to space, reconnaissance, strike, global reach and commercial transportation.” [Washington Post]

    Related content:
    DISCOVER: Cheaper Rides Into Space
    DISCOVER: It’s 2008. Here’s Your Jet Pack
    80beats: DARPA Wants a Biofuel Jet, While Germany Works on a Hydrogen Plane
    80beats: Super-Green, Algae-Derived Jet Fuel Passes Tests With Flying Colors
    80beats: DARPA Loses Contact with Mach 20 “Hypersonic Glider” During Test Flight


  • Bret Michaels on “American Idol” Finale

    There were rumors that rocker Bret Michaels will appear for “American Idol” Finale, but the rumors turned out to be true, he not only appeared on the show, but he even performed by singing “Every Rose Has Its Thorn” with Casey James on Wednesday.



    When Bret appeared in public, there were big cheers from the crowd at the Theater in L.A. It was only last month, Bret Michaels was so sick and was hospitalized due to brain hemorrhage and he struggled a lot to get back to the stage once again. He was released from the hospital and got admitted again after having warning stroke again earlier this month. And finally he is back and back with same spirits.

    Bret was one of the finalists in Donald Trump’s “The Celebrity Apprentice” and he won the contest. Now Bret is being pronounced as “Celebrity Apprentice Winner”. Bret is now ready for his tours once again and people everywhere are waiting for him to see him on the stage performing live. Well, guys your wish is heard and Bret will be in front of you once again rocking.

    Related posts:

    1. Who Won Celebrity Apprentice 2010?
    2. Bret Michaels Winner of “Celebrity Apprentice”
    3. Brett Michaels Condition Is Still Critical

  • Pre Plus, Pixi Plus show up in UK a day early

    Palm Pixi Plus UK O2 

    The Palm Pre Plus and Palm Pixi Plus are set to launch in on O2 in the UK tomorrow, but Murray just let us know that his local O2 store has them out on the floor and available for sale today, along with the above in-store photo of the Pixi Plus. If you’ve got a hankering for some new and improved webOS action, it might be worth a quick call to your local shop to see if they’ve jumped the gun as well.

    Thanks, Murray!

  • Boku Muscles Up With Andreessen Horowitz

    Mobile payments are an incredibly promising phenomenon — set to reach $633 billion by 2014 — so much so that many of the top venture capital firms are lining up against each other for a fight. Now, the teams are basically complete, with newcomer VC firm Andreessen Horowitz taking its spot next to San Francisco-based Boku.

    How Boku works (it still uses the Paymo brand, which it acquired)

    Boku is almost the definition of a “fat startup,” said co-founder and SVP product and marketing Ron Hirson in an interview this week. The company was founded at the beginning of last year, quickly raised funding to buy two of the biggest competitors in the space of mobile payments for virtual goods — Paymo and Mobillcash — and now is facing off against the third, Zong.

    Boku had already raised $38 million, and Andreessen Horowitz belatedly jumped into the previous round, which closed in December 2009. So now the company’s investment team is Benchmark Capital, Index Ventures, Khosla Ventures, DAG Ventures and Andreessen Horowitz. Meanwhile, Zong’s backers are Matrix Partners, Advent Venture Partners and Newbury Ventures. Other firms have looked farther afield to places like Europe and India where mobile payments markets are further along, with enStage backed by Accel; PayMate backed by Mayfield Fund, Kleiner Perkins and Sherpalo Ventures; and Klarna backed by Sequoia Capital (the PayPal investor, back in the day).

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Report: Monetizing Digital Content



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Suits With Custom iPad Pockets, For the Fanboy On the Go [Suits]

    You could carry your iPad in a bag like a normal person. But it’d be so far from your body! Luckily, these new suits feature an iPad pocket inside the jacket, keeping it nice and close to your heart. More »










    ShoppingSportClothingTailorCustom

  • 50 Cent Liquid Diet Weight Loss, Curtis Jackson 50 Cent Prepairing for Things Fall Apart Movie

    Things Falling Apart 50 Cent Curtis Jackson50 Cent was always enthusiastic and full of goals and when Curtis Jackson want something he gets it, if you read the 50 th Law book what he wrote with the big author Robert Greene then you know Curtis’ real attitude. Recently stunning images shows the rapper who lost 50 Lbs for his new movie Things Fall Apart. He ended up loosing 50 lbs from 214 to 160 the end result is shocking. He achived  the new look in 9 weeks and it’s brillint how a man with goals can do anything.

    In movie Things Fall Apart which will debute next year and he will play football player who was recently diagnosed with cancer. He lost 50 pounds with liquid diet and treadmill walks what he did for nine weeks. 50 Cent removed his tattoos too for this movie.

    This is not luck this is pure power game, and the hidden message here is that he can achieve anything what he wants. That’s all you want to lose weight 50 Lbs in 2 month what sounds impossibile just set up clear goals in your life and you’ll be able to do it. I suggest you to buy The 50th Law written by 50 Cent and Robert Greene to learn more about Curtis Jackson.

    Related posts:

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    2. Is it Goodbye for Alice and Emmet in Breaking Dawn and Hello New Cast?
    3. Today is Robert Pattinson’s Birthday!

  • Obama: “Climate change poses a threat to our way of life.” – Starts the pivot from spill to bill: “I’m going to keep fighting to pass comprehensive energy and climate legislation”

    Obama will be holding a press conference about the BP oil disaster today at 12:45 p.m. eastern time.  You can watch the conference live at this link: http://www.whitehouse.gov/live.

    We’re not going to be able to sustain this kind of fossil fuel use.  This planet can’t sustain it.

    Obama gave a big speech at Solyndra, a California solar manufacturing plant, yesterday, which I’ll excerpt below.  For background on Solyndra, see “First Energy Department loan guarantee goes to … a solar manufacturer.”

    DotEarth opinion blogger Andy Revkin just tweeted,

    Obama sci chief: POTUS will give major speech on climate (not imminent). “He believes it, he understands it, we’re going to get it done.”

    Here are excerpts from Obama’s speech:

    We’ve got to go back to basics.  We’ve got to go back to making things.  We’ve got to go back to exports.  We’ve got to go back to innovation.  And we recognized that there was only so much government could do.  The true engine of economic growth will always be companies like Solyndra, will always be America’s businesses.  But that doesn’t mean the government can just sit on the sidelines.  Government still has the responsibility to help create the conditions in which students can gain an education so they can work at Solyndra, and entrepreneurs can get financing so they can start a company, and new industries can take hold.

    So that’s why, even as we cut taxes and provided emergency relief over the past year — we also invested in basic research, in broadband networks, in rebuilding roads and bridges, in health information technology, and in clean energy.  Because not only would this spur hiring by businesses — it would create jobs in sectors with incredible potential to propel our economy for years, for decades to come.  There is no better example than energy.

    We all know the price we pay as a country as a result of how we produce and use — and, yes, waste — energy today.  We’ve been talking about it for decades — since the gas shortages of the 1970s.  Our dependence on foreign oil endangers our security and our economy.  Climate change poses a threat to our way of life — in fact, we’re already beginning to see its profound and costly impact. And the spill in the Gulf, which is just heartbreaking, only underscores the necessity of seeking alternative fuel sources. We’re not going to transition out of oil next year or 10 years from now.  But think about it, part of what’s happening in the Gulf is that oil companies are drilling a mile underwater before they hit ground, and then a mile below that before they hit oil.

    With the increased risks, the increased costs, it gives you a sense of where we’re going.  We’re not going to be able to sustain this kind of fossil fuel use. This planet can’t sustain it.  Think about when China and India — where consumers there are starting to buy cars and use energy the way we are.  So we’ve known that we’ve had to shift in a fundamental way, and that’s true for all of us.

    Now, earlier today I spoke to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, who, as you know, is a Nobel Prize-winning physicist.  And he’s been on the scene in the Gulf, deeply involved in our efforts to bring this crisis to an end….

    … a lot of damage has been done already — livelihoods destroyed, landscapes scarred, wildlife affected.  Lives have been lost.  Our thoughts and prayers are very much with the people along the Gulf Coast.

    And let me reiterate:  We will not rest until this well is shut, the environment is repaired, and the cleanup is complete. And I look forward to returning there on Friday to review the efforts currently underway and lend my support to the region.

    But even as we are dealing with this immediate crisis, we’ve got to remember that the risks our current dependence on oil holds for our environment and our coastal communities is not the only cost involved in our dependence on these fossil fuels.  Around the world, from China to Germany, our competitors are waging a historic effort to lead in developing new energy technologies.  There are factories like this being built in China, factories like this being built in Germany.  Nobody is playing for second place.  These countries recognize that the nation that leads the clean energy economy is likely to lead the global economy.  And if we fail to recognize that same imperative, we risk falling behind.  We risk falling behind.

    Fifteen years ago, the United States produced 40 percent of the world’s solar panels — 40 percent.  That was just 15 years ago.  By 2008, our share had fallen to just over 5 percent. I don’t know about you, but I’m not prepared to cede American leadership in this industry, because I’m not prepared to cede America’s leadership in the global economy.

    So that’s why we’ve placed a big emphasis on clean energy.  It’s the right thing to do for our environment, it’s the right thing to do for our national security, but it’s also the right thing to do for our economy.

    And we can see the positive impacts right here at Solyndra.  Less than a year ago, we were standing on what was an empty lot.  But through the Recovery Act, this company received a loan to expand its operations.  This new factory is the result of those loans.

    Since the project broke ground last fall, more than 3,000 construction workers have been employed building this plant.  Across the country, workers — (applause) — across the country, workers in 22 states are manufacturing the supplies for this project.  Workers in a dozen states are building the advanced manufacturing equipment that will power this new facility.  When it’s completed in a few months, Solyndra expects to hire a thousand workers to manufacture solar panels and sell them across America and around the world…..

    But thanks to loans through the Department of Energy, which helped provide Tesla motors with the financial wherewithal to expand, that shuttered plant is soon going to reopen.  (Applause.)  And once again — once again, it will be a symbol of promise, an example of what’s possible here in America.

    Tesla is joining with Toyota in a venture to put a thousand skilled workers back to work manufacturing an all-electric car.  (Applause.)  And this is only the beginning.  We’re investing in advanced battery technologies to power plug-in hybrid cars.  In fact, today in Tennessee there’s a groundbreaking for an advanced battery manufacturing facility that will generate hundreds of jobs.  And it was made possible by loans through the Department of Energy, as well as tax credits and grants to increase demand for these vehicles.

    We used to account for about 2 percent of advanced battery technologies for cars.  We’re expecting, in the next couple years, to get up to 20, 30, maybe even 40 percent, building our market share right here in the United States of America.

    We’re investing in an advanced electricity grid.  And Governor Schwarzenegger and I were just talking about this before we came out, because this has been a big priority for him — that will be more efficient and better able to harness renewable energy sources.  We’re providing grants to build wind farms and install these solar panels, helping us double our ability to generate renewable energy.  We’re expanding our capacity in biofuels to reduce our dependence on oil.  We’ve helped forge one historic agreement — and are on track to produce a second — to dramatically increase the fuel efficiency of America’s cars and trucks.  So we are making progress.  It’s progress that’s going to produce jobs, that’s going to help secure our future.

    But we’ve still got more work to do, and that’s why I’m going to keep fighting to pass comprehensive energy and climate legislation in Washington.  (Applause.)  We’re going to try to get it done this year, because what we want to do is create incentives that will fully unleash the potential for jobs and growth in this sector.

    Already we’re seeing the results of the steps we’ve taken.  As I said, before the Recovery Act, we had the capacity to make less than 2 percent of the world’s advanced vehicle batteries.  In the next five years, we’ll make 40 percent of these batteries here in the United States.  Before the Recovery Act, we could build just 5 percent of the world’s solar panels.  In the next few years, we’re going to double our share to more than 10 percent.

    Here at this site, Solyndra expects to make enough solar panels each year to generate 500 megawatts of electricity.  And over the lifetime of this expanded facility, that could be like replacing as many as eight coal-fired power plants.  It’s also worth noting, to achieve this doubling of our share of solar capacity, we actually need to make four times as many solar panels, because other countries are adding capacity, too.  Nobody in this race is standing still.

    So these steps are helping to safeguard our environment.  They’re helping to lower our dependence on oil.  At a time when people are struggling and looking for work, these steps are helping to strengthen our economy and create jobs.  We all know how important that is, because times here in California are still tough.  It’s going to take time to replace the millions of jobs we lost in this recession.

    Unemployment remains high, even though the economy is growing and has started adding hundreds of thousands of jobs each month.  So it took years to dig our way into this hole; we’re not going to dig our way out overnight.  But what you are proving here — all of you, collectively — is that as difficult as it will be, as far as we’ve got to go, we will recover.  We will rebuild.  We will emerge from this period of turmoil stronger than ever before.

    That’s not all.  You’re also proving something more.  Every day that you build this expanded facility, as you fill orders for solar panels to ship around the world, you’re demonstrating that the promise of clean energy isn’t just an article of faith — not anymore.  It’s not some abstract possibility for science fiction movies or a distant future — 10 years down the road or 20 years down the road.  It’s happening right now.  The future is here.  We’re poised to transform the ways we power our homes and our cars and our businesses.  And we’re poised to lead our competitors in the development of new technologies and products and businesses.  And we are poised to generate countless new jobs, good-paying middle-class jobs, right here in the United States of America.

    That’s the promise of clean energy.  And thanks to the men and women here today — and the innovators and the workers all across America — it’s a promise that we’ve already begun to fulfill.

    Related Post:

  • Obama says good-bye to MMS chief

    by Randy Rieland.

    Obama To-Do List, May 27, 2010:

    Head of Minerals Management Services: Say good-bye

    Deepwater oil drilling permits: Freeze, six months

    Oil lease sales off Alaska coast: Cancel

    Oil
    lease sales in Western Gulf: Cancel

    Oil
    lease sales off coast of Virginia: Cancel

    Safety
    standards: Get tough

    Find out more.

    BP
    beatdown

    BP is medicore at plugging leaky oil wells, but has finger-pointing down. The oil giant’s report
    to Congress suggested crews working for Transocean missed “warning signs” of
    serious problems under the rig before it exploded
    , and raised questions about Halliburton’s cement
    work. But what goes around comes around.  

    Ian Urbina, writing in the New York Times, reports that just days before the explosion, BP
    chose to use a cheaper, but riskier casing for the well. And more details have begun spilling out
    about a heated explosion-day argument on the rig. Transocean reps wanted no part of a plan to
    replace heavy drilling fluid in the pipe with lighter sea water. A BP “company man” overruled them.

    The
    New Orleans Times Picayune is
    starting to lay some wood on BP too:

    It’s
    unclear whether the disaster would have been prevented had the drilling mud not
    been pumped out prematurely, but the blowout would definitely have been less
    likely. Removing the fluid was BP’s call, and the firm needs to own up to its
    mistakes.

    Greenpeace
    is soliciting redesigns of
    BP’s sunny green logo
    .

    ODrama 

    The next two days will go a long way
    in determining whether the president gets stuck in BP’s muck. Extending the drilling freeze today and
    flying to the Gulf tomorrow may rehabilitate his feskless image. And if
    the “Top Kill” works, he can go all presidential and take control of the cleanup. But
    he’s still on the high wire. 

    Here are two takes on his dicey
    dilemma from a New York Times online
    debate

     Glenn Greenwald, Salon.com
    columnist:

    Far more
    significant will be the perception that he (Obama) failed to “protect” us from
    this threat, a potentially devastating belief in a society where “protecting us
    from harm” has come to be seen as the president’s overarching responsibility
    (far higher than what the Constitution actually describes as the prime
    presidential duty: “to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution”).

    Samuel Thernstrom,
    resident fellow, American Enterprise Institute:

    The president
    must juggle competing concerns: He can correctly point to mounting evidence
    that both BP and Transocean cut crucial corners in their haste to finish this
    well, but he cannot succumb to the natural temptation to demonize drilling if
    he wants to preserve the opportunity for bipartisan climate and energy
    legislation.

    Cry them a
    river

    Finally, Christine Dell’Amore,  writing for National Geographic notes a little discussed, self-destructive fallout from the
    spreading spill: it could end up doing serious damage to the oil
    industry’s infrastructure in the Gulf
    .  

    If oil kills off marsh plants,
    wetlands will turn to open water, putting the shallowly buried coastal
    pipelines at risk of ships strikes, storms, and corrosive salt water. Each rip
    means more leaking oil, costly repairs and replacements, and in some cases, new
    wetland-restoration projects.

     

    Related Links:

    The Climate Post: BP oil spill washes up on Potomac shores

    Michigan: Where U.S. clean energy, emissions, efficiency policy really counts

    Obama preaches green tech gospel to California choir