Thursday, December 4, 2008

Hey, did you ever imagine peace?





The Imagine Peace Tower is located in Iceland and contains the inscribed words "Imagine Peace" (想像和平) in 24 languages. The tower serves as a memorial to John Lennon (9 October 1940 – 8 December 1980) from widow Yoko Ono. The power for the lights is provided by Iceland's unique geo-thermal energy grid.


Imagine Peace Tower

Imagine Peace News
Strawberry Fields
Wish Trees

Monday, November 10, 2008

Hey, did you see that pomegranates are the answer?




Change you can believe in!

Shamelessly "borrowed" post by "nonny mouse" at Crooks and Liars.

James Brett is an Englishman who, in 1999 while on a business trip to Peshawar in the north west province of Pakistan, had his first glass of pomegranate juice, and fell in love with it. He founded the first pomegranate juice drink in the UK, Pomegreat (.pdf). Further research led him to Afghanistan, where the best pomegranates in the world are grown, particularly in the Kandahar region. A recovering substance abuser, Brett was also aware that Afghanistan was a major producer of heroin.

In 2007, Brett was invited to Kabul to talk to farmers from various regions of Afghanistan about growing pomegranates. He flew to Peshawar and drove through the Khyber Pass heading to Kabul While driving through the Nangarhar Province, he noticed a farmer in a field of opium poppies. After the seminar in Kabul, Brett bought a large piece of card and a blue marker pen, and wrote 'Pomegranate is the Answer'. On his return drive back to Peshawar, he saw the same farmer again in the field, jumped out of the car and ran toward the farmer with his makeshift sign. His horrified translator chased after this mad ginger-haired Brit, yelling, 'Don't go in there, you could be shot!' Undetered, Brett talked to the bewildered farmer through his translator, about the farmer's life, his family, his children, how he lived and why he grew opium, about Brett's own addiction to drugs. Brett explained that pomegranate was not only the best option as an alternative crop to opium poppies, but was the only feasible one for the Afghan climate and growing conditions, and promised to return to the farmer's land a couple months later with pomegranate saplings. He went home and set up a charity called Pom354.

Brett followed through on his promise, returning a few months later to find the farmer had discussed this idea with sixteen other families with land around his own; all of them wanted to become involved. From there, the plan snowballed – in January, 2008, Afghanistan Television interviewed him, and other farmers asked him for help in changing their fields from poppies to pomegranates. The local member of Parliament and a respected Elder in the Tribal system wanted to know more. A tribal meeting covering the entire Nangarhar Province was called, and 200 Tribal elders invited.

The tribal elders agreed to finish poppy cultivation and switch to growing pomegranates throughout the entire Nangarhar Province by next year, making the region of 1.3 million inhabitants opium poppy free for the first time in a hundred years. The elders told Brett that their decision was based not only on a desire to maintain a level of stability, but because he was the first person who had ever come to them as just an ordinary man rather than a member of a foreign government or a military advisor, someone who simply wanted to see positive change. The tribal elders and Brett then conducted the official opening ceremony in that first farmer's field, now cleared of poppies, and planted the first pomegranate tree sapling. A national meeting is now being planned to expand the pomegranate industry throughout Afghanistan, with the broad support of the Afghani tribal elders as well as the government.

If you'd like to listen to an interview with this remarkable, refreshingly mad Englishman, tune into this webcast on Radio New Zealand. You'll be glad you did. (h/t Sue Gee)

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Hey, did you see that sound?

Cymatics is the study of the physical effects of sound waves. Some have used this idea of the "shapes of sound" in interesting ways. For example, some feel this knowledge can be used to explain such things as psychosomatic illness and promote audio therapy. Thomas J. Mitchell has used the mysterious shapes found at Rosslyn Chapel (mentioned in Dan Brown's Best Seller "The Da Vinci Code") to create music:



Mitchell has used this music "code" as pseudo-supernatural sheet music to produce a CD, entitled the Rosslyn Motet. I have yet to hear the CD, but when I do, I will follow up.

The theories of cymatics are described HERE. The following video gives a better demonstration of the theory than the previous video:

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Hey, did you see those Air Cars?

There are 2 competing air-powered engines: one from France that uses an engine similar to the internal combustion type we're all familiar with, but powered by air; and another developed in Australia that uses a unique rotary design (the "di Pietro Engine").

Part 1: France


Part 2: Australia


I'm more partial to the Australian design. Critics claim air is only a energy medium and filling up with air still takes an energy source, therefore, not solving any energy problems. While (perhaps) this is true, it also produces no emissions.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Hey, did you see that one thing called the Pickens Plan?

Photo: Toronto-based Great Lakes offshore wind turbines.

More wind.
+
More natural gas.
+
More biofuels.

=

Less foreign oil.

Its being called: the Pickens Plan.


Here is a nice site created by some nice Canadians that list some pros and cons of different alternative energy sources--> Click Here, Eh?
There are more informative websites, but this one is quick and concise for our fast-paced world!