You have to see this. http://www.breathingearth.net/
Thanks to Matt.
Welcome to the Social Surplus - or rather, welcome to how I have chosen to use part of mine. I focus on the issues I feel are important: energy, the environment, the economy, and anything else I find hidden on the internet that seems interesting.
For a background on the concept of a Social Surplus , check out my first post.
Thanks for visiting!
For a background on the concept of a Social Surplus , check out my first post.
Thanks for visiting!
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Monday, May 24, 2010
Smallpox
So I won't be sleeping tonight after reading this essay on Smallpox. It is a detailed (though a little graphic at times) essay about the danger we all now face from Smallpox - a virus that has officially been declared "eradicated" but still exists in a freezer near you. Virtually no one (in the world, that is) has immunity to the virus anymore because it no longer exists naturally.
Can you spell epidemic waiting to happen? What makes me nervous is not that this could be used as a bioweapon or the fact that my government doesn't seem to have taken notice to our vulnerability (there are maybe 7 million vaccines readily available - and it is estimated that we would require 100 million vaccines in the US to contain an epidemic)...
What makes me the most nervous is the fact that Smallpox is so contagious that it could be around the world in 6 weeks. What makes me nervous is the fact that if it were ever used, on any major worldwide population center, it could be in my backyard that fast. And I would have virtually no forewarning, since it takes at least 2 weeks for a physician to be able to diagnose the virus (if anyone would even recognize the symptoms of a virus barely anyone has seen in 30 years).
But that's okay, because the government is going to come and save me, right? Or maybe not. My money's on a cabin in the woods.
Can you spell epidemic waiting to happen? What makes me nervous is not that this could be used as a bioweapon or the fact that my government doesn't seem to have taken notice to our vulnerability (there are maybe 7 million vaccines readily available - and it is estimated that we would require 100 million vaccines in the US to contain an epidemic)...
What makes me the most nervous is the fact that Smallpox is so contagious that it could be around the world in 6 weeks. What makes me nervous is the fact that if it were ever used, on any major worldwide population center, it could be in my backyard that fast. And I would have virtually no forewarning, since it takes at least 2 weeks for a physician to be able to diagnose the virus (if anyone would even recognize the symptoms of a virus barely anyone has seen in 30 years).
But that's okay, because the government is going to come and save me, right? Or maybe not. My money's on a cabin in the woods.
Monday, May 17, 2010
Creating Healthy Environments
I have been thinking about the integration of healthcare and green building lately, slowly formulating a few ideas of how to develop the best health care environment possible. I'm calling the idea "Utopia General" - a place of healing where the physical environment fosters healthy decisions, runs efficiently and effectively, inspires and motivates, provides green space and clean air....
Well, it seems I'm not the only one contemplating the intersection of these concepts. The Sacred Heart Medical Center at River Bend, in Springfield OR has beat me to it. They were featured by Greenroofs.com for their 50,000 square foot intensive green roof.
The hospital is home to 386 private rooms and the eight rooftop gardens will be for the enjoyment of both patients and visitors. Kudos to Sacred Heart for their ahead-of-the-curve thinking!
Well, it seems I'm not the only one contemplating the intersection of these concepts. The Sacred Heart Medical Center at River Bend, in Springfield OR has beat me to it. They were featured by Greenroofs.com for their 50,000 square foot intensive green roof.
The hospital is home to 386 private rooms and the eight rooftop gardens will be for the enjoyment of both patients and visitors. Kudos to Sacred Heart for their ahead-of-the-curve thinking!
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Conspiracy Theory
And we're back.... I have come across too many interesting ideas lately that I want to share, so I'm giving this another go.
I came across an editorial today that talked about people's propensity to believe in conspiracies. Sure, most of us are mostly rational - but we also believe in something bordering on the fringe. Conspiracies like Area 51, or mind control, theories about the Kennedy assassination, or that Jews control Hollywood abound. One of my favorites is in a vast right wing conspiracy led by George W. Bush. Now, I may not have been his biggest fan, but I doubt that. How could a man who sometimes struggled to put together a complete sentence have managed a vast conspiracy?
So the question I would like to propose is why millions of Americans, myself included, find ourselves drawn to these conspiracy-based stories and irrational beliefs, even when we know them for what they are?
According to Wikipedia, "Psychologists believe that the search for meaning is common in conspiracism... and may be powerful enough alone to lead to the first formulating of the idea. Once cognized, confirmation bias and avoidance of cognitive dissonance may reinforce the belief. In a context where a conspiracy theory has become popular within a social group, communal reinforcement may equally play a part."
I would like to add to that. I hypothesize that the reason conspiracy theories have such a hold over us is because they allow us to believe that someone else is in control. To be precise, if there is a secret society (such as the Masons, the Opus Dei from the Davinci Code, or even a secret branch of government) controlling everything from behind the scenes, then they are to blame when things go wrong.
It's not society's failings, it's theirs. It's not the elected government, it's the people running top secret projects that screwed up. If this is true, then we as a society do not have to take responsibility. I do not have to take responsibility.
And that is a much better reason to believe in conspiracies than just because it's a good plot line. It's also comforting to know that this mess isn't our fault.
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