| |
 |
|
|
Science Forum Index » Medicine - Lyme Forum » Okay, I'll make it even simpler
Page 1 of 1
|
| Author |
Message |
| Peenies, Peenies, Peenies |
Posted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 12:05 pm |
|
|
|
Guest
|
From:
kmdickson@comcast.net
[Add to Address Book]
To:
SpinLyme@yahoogroups.com, cohenr@washpost.com, jdrazen@nejm.org,
letters@courant.com, Jgerberding@cdc.gov, lender@courant.com,
motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com, conndcj@po.state.ct.us,
executive-editor@nytimes.com, managing-editor@nytimes.com,
news-tips@nytimes.com, the-arts@nytimes.com, bizday@nytimes.com,
foreign@nytimes.com, metro@nytimes.com, national@nytimes.com,
sports@nytimes.com, dvbid@cdc.gov, brigidcallahan@optonline.net,
trvl@hotmail.com, ubinas@courant.com, spinlyme@yahoogroups.com,
mas1@concentric.net, campbell@courant.com, jhornberger@fff.org,
thomas.carson@usdoj.gov, editor@commondreams.org, kurtzh@washpost.com,
georgewill@washpost.com, horgan@courant.com,
commissioner.dcf@po.state.ct.us, cohencolumn@aol.com,
leonard.boyle@po.state.ct.us, FalNields@aol.com,
bransfield@comcast.net, vtsherr@comcast.net, mcneilel@aol.com,
oca@po.state.ct.us, dand@davila-dilzer.com,
scott.murphy@po.state.ct.us, attorney.general@po.state.ct.us,
randall.sanborn@usdoj.gov,patrick.clifford@jud.state.ct.us
CC:
francam@ucia.gov,dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir,
eugenerobinson@washpost.com, dhaar@courant.com, horgan@courant.com,
bmiller@newstimes.com, eliot.spitzer@oag.state.ny.us, trvl@hotmail.com,
rastro18@aol.com, billcurry@comcast.net, thomas.carson@usdoj.gov,
amcguigan@rms-law.com, rjmurzyn@aol.com, paulcraigroberts@yahoo.com,
sidney_blumenthal@yahoo.com, criminal.division@usdoj.gov,
karla.dobinski@usdoj.gov, christopher.christie@usdoj.gov,
francam@ucia.gov, governor.rell@po.state.ct.us, fitzmas@gmail.com,
patrick.fitzgerald@usdoj.gov,
modelt1918@sbcglobal.net,dshapley@poughkeepsiejournal.com
Subject:
Okay, I'll kake it even simpler
Date:
Tuesday, January 02, 2007 10:32:47 AM
See Hartford Courant article below about NEW PARANOID ACT
technology in Corrupticut.
This is something I even discussed with John Rowland's secretary
in Sep 2002, although at that time I did not know about the Enron
scandal
or that the Rowlandgate Hoes wanted to build an energy INDEPENDENT
"national string of prisons and juvenile detention centers" (Fort
Rowlandgate
has a fuel cell in it):
http://www.actionlyme.org/CIRCLE_J_RANCH_REPUBLICANISM_101.htm
Page not changed since the Summer of 2003:
http://www.actionlyme.org/ENERGY.htm
Then you go to the patent database and read through all the patents
for design of photovoltaic cells,
http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r=0&f=S&l=50&TERM1=photovoltaic&FIELD1=ABTX&co1=AND&TERM2=&FIELD2=&d=PTXT
and research the availability of the raw materials.
Then you start looking at all the available options for energy transfer
and
storage, (Subscribe to Popular Mechanics.) to convert your box at home
to feed back into the system. It is legal to feed energy back into the
system
and the power company has to subtract it from your bill.
SOMEONE HAS TO MANUFACTURE the solar panels and also
the converters:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=solar+heating+and+converters&btnG=Google+Search
I also designed myself, portable hydroelectric generators that
runs at *any* water speed (except zero, of course). PORTABLE.
You can take them camping with you, or you can plunk them in
a bigger stream, and it will not interfere with fish or boating traffic
and it is NOT A DAM.....
Then there's the old fashioned mechanical energy storage,
which not dangerous and messy like batteries or other chemical
storage.
At this point there is no company in southeastern CT that
installs solar panels.
I recommend the Hartford Courant invest in a physics degree
for one or more of their staff writers, because the flavor of the
state is reflected by the focus of the newspapers, and we don't
get enough PRACTICAL MECHANICs.
We learned from the Lyme crooks that you can pharm Uncle Sam
through SBIR loans if you're clever enough. Make it appear as it
your new company meets national defense needs, just like the
Lyme crooks did. (Dattwyler now manages Brookhaven where
they make all the nice synthetic membranes to test the efficacies
of nerve agents- with, of course, radiolabelled agents so they can
detect that the agent has hit the right receptor.) It will be easier
now that George blew up earth and everyone hates America, but
these thihgs we discovered in 1999 when we complained to Pataki
and the New York Legislators about who was doing what with the
grants and the Small Business Innovation Research Loans:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_frm/thread/732f5b79317f52ab/f0ba72936db1de81?lnk=st&q=kathleen+pataki+SBIR&rnum=1&hl=en#f0ba72936db1de81
http://www.actionlyme.org/OPMC_CORRUPTION.htm
Maybe someone could call it a Faith Based Initiative.
Dear Lord,
Kindly ask Russia and China not to bomb the shit out
of us, while we get down to the business of being
responsible for ourselves.
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_thread/thread/6940a8d9e0024621/8591b95e0ece47f7?q=Bush%2FGore+ENERGY+&rnum=1#8591b95e0ece47f7
Tired of saying it.
KMDickson
courant.com
http://www.courant.com/news/local/columnists/hc-rgreen0102.artjan02,0,4949946.column?coll=hc-utility-home
Economic Future Redefined
Rick Green
January 2 2007
Not long ago Nick Lecrenski left Massachusetts for the land of
opportunity -
Connecticut.
For seven years, he's been an engineer at a small technology company
with a big
future that operates out of an old school in Enfield. Lecrenski likes
his job at
Control Module Inc. so much that he recently moved from Massachusetts
and bought
a house in town.
For those who think it's time to hit the lights on manufacturing and
stake our
future on jobs at casinos and shopping malls, Lecrenski and Control
Module beg to differ.
A computer code writer who plays in a heavy metal band, Lecrenski has
had a key
role in development of Control Module's biometrics technology, in which
fingerprints are used to confirm a worker's identity. This has helped
build the
50-employee company's international reputation as a manufacturer of
devices that
track the arrival and departure of employees.
"Working here, you have a tendency to get excited about what you are
working
on," said Lecrenski, 29. "There is a real good atmosphere to bring
ideas and
have them be heard."
Yes, we're talking boring old Connecticut here.
The sad fact is that the 20- and 30-somethings are beating a path out
of
Connecticut. So when a creative young guy moves here so he can work at
a company
that actually manufactures a product here, it's time to pay attention.
Company CEO Jana Moak, who moved from Texas four years ago to direct
Control
Module's expansion, sees a state with huge assets in its educated
workforce, friendly small cities and towns and quality schools. What's
lacking is a
coordinated strategy.
"We need leadership," she said.
Leadership means politicians willing to take some chances and decide
what sort
of economic future we are going to try to nurture. Instead of millions
of
dollars to bring an NHL hockey team to Hartford - or bailing out local
school
districts with more state money for education - we need more
initiatives like
the 10-year, $100 million state investment in stem-cell research.
People such as Lecrenski, who move here, buy a home, pay taxes and who
might
invent new products that create more jobs, are the future.
"With zero job growth in the last 15 years, what are we going to do?"
asked
Frank Marco, a lawyer who works with technology companies. "You are not
going to
rebuild traditional manufacturing."
So how do we find more Nick Lecrenskis and persuade them to come to
Connecticut
instead of the Silicon Valley or Boston's Route 128?
Marco, one of the founders of the Connecticut Technology Council, said
the state needs to start investing in small start-up
technology companies, instead of the relative pittance it currently
spends on
developing technology jobs.
"When you go for many years without having the kind of growth we should
have ...
well, we have to try some new things," said Matthew Nemerson, president
and CEO
of the technology council. "Don't compare yourselves to Rhode Island or
western
Massachusetts. Compare yourself to Finland or South Korea or
Singapore."
"We are not listening to people like Jana Moak enough."
Moak will pick up the tab so that Lecrenski can pursue an MBA. She'd
like to
organize an intern program for local urban high school students. With
150 of the
Fortune 500 companies as customers, she's not worried about convincing
her next
Nick Lecrenski that Connecticut is the right place to pursue a career.
"Why not?" said Moak. "It's a nice place to live."
Just ask Nick Lecrenski.
Rick Green's column appears on Tuesdays and Fridays. He can be reached
at rgreen@courant.com
Copyright 2006, Hartford Courant
--
http://www.actionlyme.org |
|
|
| Back to top |
|
| The Frayed Ends of Sanity |
Posted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 12:25 pm |
|
|
|
Guest
|
| Peenies,ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ |
|
|
| Back to top |
|
| |
|
Page 1 of 1
All times are GMT - 5 Hours
The time now is Thu Dec 04, 2008 2:28 am
|
|