Archive for the ‘Podcasts’ Category

The Lindberg Report Podcast: Will We Continue to Dirty Our Nest With Nuclear?

kennecott-open-pit.jpgA long time ago, I heard, or read, that the human animal is the only creature on earth that’s content with living in it’s own waste. The analogy being that most animals choose to leave their waste products somewhere outside their nests. Our nest is this beautiful, blue marble, maybe the only one of its kind, and we’ve treated it with careless disrespect.

I’ve created a podcast from this material. If you’d rather listen, the link is here: Get Adobe Flash Player to play this audio or download the audio file instead.

Looking at the current mess we have with nuclear waste, landscapes scarred with huge open-pit mines and tons of unprotected waste from those operations, greenhouse gasses and pollution of our waters, to name a few, I think the old saying is correct. Read the rest of this entry »

The Lindberg Report Podcast: The New Global Crisis? Food!

corn.jpgBMO Financial Group strategist Donald Coxe warns that the current credit crunch and soaring oil prices will pale in comparison to a looming shortage of food.

Again, I’ve included a podcast, just in case you’d rather listen: Get Adobe Flash Player to play this audio or download the audio file instead.

Investors are being warned, a global food catastrophe is emerging, a dire prediction he dropped on the Empire Club’s 14th annual investment outlook meeting in Toronto.

Coxe blames heavy demand from the biofuels industry, and the growing middle classes of countries such as India and China. To keep up with the demand, he says food output needs to be expanded dramatically. Read the rest of this entry »

The Lindberg Report Podcast: Eminent Scientist Trashes Renewables, Touts Nuclear

lovelockportrait.gifSound familiar? Well, if you’ve been following my rant on nuclear power you’ll remember my first podcast on the subject concerning a paper written by researcher Jesse Ausubel, Nuclear Energy is Clean; Renewables Damage the Ecology , condemning renewables and praising nuclear energy.

Before continuing, once again I’ve produced a podcast on this subject, so if you don’t have time to read, tune in here: Get Adobe Flash Player to play this audio or download the audio file instead.

Now, 86 year old Dr. James Lovelock, pictured at the left, has written a book, The Revenge of Gaia (Penguin Books 2006), where he makes no bones about it – nuclear energy can save humanity, and “there is no sensible alternative to nuclear power if we are to sustain humanity,” a quote taken from the pages of the World Nuclear Association’s web pages. Read the rest of this entry »

The Lindberg Report Podcast: Concerns About 2008

frustration-798907.jpgI have two concerns for the year 2008, the first is the proliferation of uranium mining and nuclear power stations, and the second is that George Bush and Dick Cheney will be in office for the entire year.

Before going on, I’ve made a podcast of this article, and if you’d rather listen, the link is here. Get Adobe Flash Player to play this audio or download the audio file instead.

It’s difficult to say which one of the two options above concerns me most, but the Bush/Cheney administration, in its own way, is about as scary as nuclear proliferation. Their environmental record may well go down in history as one of the worst ever, and there’s still plenty of time to make it even worse. Read the rest of this entry »

The Lindberg Report Podcast: How Did I Get Here, Anyway? My Year-End Podcast

5687_man_with_lemons_pitcher_of_lemonade_and_a_glass_of_juice.jpgIt’s true, lemons often turn into lemonade. It happened to me, and I gotta tell the story.Get Adobe Flash Player to play this audio or download the audio file instead.

The Lindberg Report Podcast: The Sleeping Nuclear Giant May Awaken, Be Afraid

uf6-typical-storage-yard.jpgOur lawmakers have agreed to increase funding to guarantee up to 80% of loans for nuclear expansion. 17 companies are reportedly planning construct up to 30 new nuclear power stations.

I decided to dedicate my first official Planetsave podcast to the nuclear industry and the threats to our safety that come with it. Several links are mentioned in the podcast, and they are listed below.

Before we start, let me call your attention to some photos taken by the Department of Energy. They show open air storage vessels containing high-level radioactive material.

The image above is one of the three cylinder storage yards in America. You will find more pictures of rusted, leaking and patched cylinders in the Department of Energy link.

So, let’s continue…

Get Adobe Flash Player to play this audio or download the audio file instead..

The links I mentioned are below.

Department of Energy
The Tennessean
Sierra Club
Sierra Club Marilyn Berlin Snell

Podcast Interview with an Eco-Stressed Santa Claus

santa-claus.jpgIt’s finally happened, good old St Nick is beginning to buckle under to the stresses of an over-abundance of controls and regulations. The jolly old elf just isn’t that jolly anymore, and he explains why in this interview.

More Deadly Christmas Gifts on the Shelves?

frustration.jpg35 percent of toys contain lead”

Testers bought most popular children’s products at major retail dealers.”

The headlines from an Associated Press story out of Detroit, on the results of tests performed by the Michigan-based Ecology Center, along with the national Center for Health, Environment and Justice, and groups in eight other states.

What’s a parent to do? Of the more than 1,200 children’s products tested, 35 percent contained lead, while only 20 percent of the toys and other products had no trace of lead or harmful chemicals. Happy Christmas shopping mom and dad.

The article mentioned a Hanna Montana card game case, Circo brand shoes and a Go Diego Go! backpack as items containing the most amount of lead. And those were just a few named in the report, as we continue to hear about tainted toys and products for kids. All this after thousands of these items were pulled off retailers shelves just months ago and sent back to China. At least I hope they went to China.

Ok, I agree, something should be done about making sure young people receive items that don’t contain dangerous chemicals. But sometimes I wonder about this constant barrage of reports on things dangerous, how effective are they, and how necessary.

Here’s where I go back a lot of years to when I was a kid at Christmas. Talk about lead, even the paint on the woodwork contained lead, and there was lead in the gasoline we burned in cars, and a few of my toys were made of lead. It was bad enough, 70 years ago, and in the following years to be concerned about whether the Japanese or Germans would invade our shores. There was the Cold War, and a real possibility that someone’s nuclear arsenal would land on our lawn any moment. That was upsetting, and the list goes on. On that note, even today, our president is still pounding the table with fears about Iran and their nuclear capability. God, it just doesn’t end. I can’t wait for the next year to be over.

My childhood, and that of my children and a couple of generations later were littered with things deemed unsafe today. Other items listed in the report were cadmium and arsenic, and others that went unnamed. No one complained then, and for the most part, we’ve all grown up pretty healthy, all things considered.

Face it, the baby boomer generation grew up with all that crap in their toys and they’ll soon become a greater part of our population. Sure, some will be ill with all sorts of diseases eventually, but what part did their toys play in those maladies? And yes, I’ve read the articles about infants eating lead-based paint off the walls and seen the horrible results. Lead doesn’t belong where children are, in their toys or homes, no question here.

I’ve read articles from “experts” who claim we can be too protective of our children. Shielding them from contact with some everyday things could weaken or stunt the growth of their immune systems, leaving them wide open for serious health problems later in life. Again, don’t misread me here, lead, arsenic and the like don’t fall into that category.

Ok, it is a problem and I’m not saying don’t do the tests and let’s make everything as clean as we can for our kids. But it seems like every time I turn around someone is putting out a report about something that’ll screw up someone’s health or life style.

I just did a podcast interview with Melanie Pickett on Eco-Anxiety, and fully understand what she’s saying. We’re being bombarded with negativity at an alarming rate. It’s no wonder people are rushing to their therapists and doctors for anxiety drugs and something to make the depression go away. Hell, we can’t win, we’re doomed folks, there are hidden dangers everywhere!

If you’ll recall, I did a story on mold and toxins in our homes just last week. I have lung disease, and Sally does everything she can to make our home as free of dust and other irritants as she can. But, reading the article from which I got my information, there was no doubt, our lovely home could be considered a death trap!

Chicken Little’s are alive, they’re all out there trying to get the few minutes of fame with doomsday scenario’s about every facet of our lives. Frankly, I’m sick of it, there’s too much to deal with just getting up in the morning and keeping our sanity and homes together with daily chores. Life’s full of surprises without someone thinking up a new life-threatening whatever in an effort to steer us in their direction and way of thinking.

Am I concerned about global warming? Sure. Are Sally and I doing what little we can to lessen our carbon footprint? You bet. Are we about to head to a counselor to talk about our eco-anxiety? Nope. We understand we can only do what we can do.

Buy wisely, not only this Christmas season, but at all times of the year. There are potholes everywhere. And stay cool about the environment, do what we can and get on with life. As for the Chicken Little’s, I’ll have wings please!

Image courtesy wendeebeefrustration1.jpg

Have Eco-Anxiety? You Probably Do, But There’s Hope

melissapickett1.jpgMore and more people are showing up at their therapists these days with signs of what is called eco-anxiety, or fear concerning environmental issues. Santa Fe, NM therapist Melissa Pickett says this unrest has been growing in the last two years, and may be the tip of the iceberg.

Michael d’Estries wrote about Melissa in May, and I had the occasion to interview her recently about this issue, and the field of eco-psychology. You can hear the interview at The Lindberg Report.

Melissa spent several years in the corporate world as a banking executive and trainer for a marketing firm. In an effort to sharpen her people skills, she went back to school and earned a Masters Degree in Counseling. Finding the field personally rewarding, she shifted her business emphasis from organizational development to private counseling.

Melissa has been in practice since 2000, and is President of Soulways Center for Conscious Evolution. The first signs of eco-anxiety emerged in sessions with her clients on a large scale within the past two years, and it appears to be growing. Her work has led to interviews on Canadian television, in TIME Magazine’s online edition, and publications in Spain and Brazil.

What is eco-anxiety? How do we know if we have it, and what can we do to ease the discomfort? My podcast interview with Melissa is HERE

Scientists Ask for Billions to Increase Ocean Monitoring

tony_haymet_main.jpgMarine scientists are meeting with the 72-nation Group on Earth Observations (GEO) in Cape Town, South Africa this week, asking for $2-3 billion to study the threats of climate change and overfishing of the world’s oceans. Attending will be representatives from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego.

I had the privilege of interviewing Dr. A.D.J. “Tony” Haymet, Vice Chancellor for Marine Sciences, Director of Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Dean of the Graduate School of Marine Sciences, UC San Diego on the eve of the meeting, and we talked about the reasons for the request.

That interview is available here on Planetsave’s Podcast site.

  • If you’d like to know more about the ARGO program Dr. Haymet explains in the interview, you can go here
  • To learn more about the Group on Earth Observations, this is their website.
  • Dr. Haymet is also chairman of the Partnership for Observation of Global Oceans (POGO). Their website is here.
  • And of course, there’s the Scripps Institution of Oceanography
    and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography News Page.
  • If you’d like to know more about Dr. Haymet, his Biography is here…