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Doctor Groups Flex Muscle In Capitol: $2.3 Million in Campaign Cash to Influence Health-Care Reform

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Occupy Arrestees Win Their Right to Full Trials—Even Though They May Not Need It

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Home · Articles · News · Murmurs · Global warming? Nah.
July 26th, 2006 WW Editorial Staff | Murmurs
 

Global warming? Nah.

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Thinking of trading up? For a cool $3.995 million, Nike will sell you the 8,400-square-foot Portland Heights mansion it bought from now-former CEO William Perez. Never shy about taking a profit, the sneaker giant paid only $3.16 million for the shack at 1975 SW Montgomery Drive in March. That's the same price Perez paid in April 2005 when he thought his relationship with Phil Knight might last longer than a pair of Air Jordans. If chez Perez seems pricey with its 26 percent markup, check out the crib of soon-to-be-former OHSU boss Dr. Peter Kohler a few doors north. A mere $1.95 million gets you that 5,892-square-foot home at 1863 SW Montgomery Drive.

Accused Earth Liberation Front arsonist Tre Arrow hopes at least 10 donors will contribute $100,000 apiece for his bail from a Canadian jail. Arrow says in a July 23 email to supporters that he plans to propose the $1 million bail idea to the British Columbia Court of Appeal in September or October. Arrow also says in the email he dictated over the phone that he "will agree to any condition" to convince the government he won't flee. Donors wouldn't have to hand over the money but must be willing to show they have the equity, in case it's needed. Arrested in Victoria in March 2004, Arrow is in the Vancouver Island Regional Correctional Centre while he fights extradition to Oregon to stand trial in connection with a pair of arsons five years ago.

In the past three months, a caller from an Oregon area code has been harassing more people around the country than any other caller, according to a website that tracks unsolicited phone calls. Nearly 200 people reported to whocalled.us that they got a call from "Dorothy with the mortgage company." The caller from (503) 426-3110 claims to offer 1 percent mortgage loans but hangs up if you ask questions, irate victims tell whocalled.us. Murmurs' call to that number was answered by an automated message instructing us to enter a phone number if we wanted to be on a "do not call" list.

Punk scenesters got a nasty shock Friday night when Portland Police Officer Garrett Dow tasered a female concertgoer in the chest. Responding to a noise complaint, Dow entered the warehouse at Northeast 19th Avenue and Couch Street about 11:30 pm. Bystanders say Dow got into a verbal altercation with the bass player of the band Polka Madre. Some in the crowd of about 40 people tried to restrain the officer. The police report says the woman, who left without being identified, had punched Dow from behind. Several witnesses say she'd tapped him on the shoulder.

Harry Potter, Pirates of the Caribbean and the pope were the most frequent tropes for the 30-plus entrants in WW's contest to caption this photo of Mayor Tom Potter (who was accepting a ceremonial robe from a delegation from Kazakhstan). The winner of the $50 gift certificate to Kells Irish Restaurant and Pub: Ed Rae of Southeast Portland for "Pirate of the Crabby Bein'."

WEB-ONLY MURMURS!

The 22-year-old stepson of KINK program director Dennis Constantine took his own life July 19. The news that Constantine's stepson, Toby, had jumped off the Fremont Bridge reached the family in Baltimore, where they were visiting the grave of Constantine's father. The Multnomah County River Patrol recovered a body at 8 am Sunday, July 23, but authorities had not confirmed identification as of press time. A memorial service is scheduled for 2:30 pm Friday, July 28, at Riverview Abbey, 319 SW Taylors Ferry Road.

State Rep. Jeff Kropf (R-Sublimity), a conservative radio host, wants to take his free-market principles right into the belly of the beast, a.k.a. the Oregon Legislature. Commenting Sunday on his blog A Better Watch (a-better-watch.blogspot.com) about a commission considering ways to improve the statehouse, Kropf suggested lawmakers be paid "based on free-market, results-oriented principles." What's that mean? According to Kropf, "Some who serve in the Legislature should pay for the privilege based on their weak performance, rather than get paid." Although "it would be complicated to develop the metrics to measure performance" (ya think?), Kropf says he expects opposition to his plan only "from those who are lazy."

Powerhouse Salem lobbyist Larry Campbell's $8,000-a-month Victory Group contract with SAIF Corp. expires at the end of August and will be put out for bids. Some Salem insiders say Victory's work for the state-run workers' compensation insurance company is finished following a house-cleaning at SAIF. But it's worth noting that Victory recently won renewal of a $3,000-a-month contract to help shift responsibility for homeland security from the Oregon State Police to the Oregon Military Department.

After numerous changes and modifications (most recently $29,000 for three additional electonic doors, two with card readers), the cost of upgrading and repairing the Multnomah County Elections building at 1040 SE Morrison St. is nearly 40 percent over budget. County commissioners are slated to vote Thursday, July 27, whether to approve the new $735,000 price tag for the renovation (the original cost estimate was $535,000), as they are required to do for any contract that goes more than one-third over budget. County officials say the new doors will address security concerns by staff.

A suspicious name has turned up on the latest spending reports filed by groups behind two state ballot initiatives: Ricca Petitioning Services, whose registrant, Daniel Ricca, was accused of forging signatures and falsifying voter registrations in Oregon in 2002. The Orange County Register in California has reported that there was insufficient evidence to prove those accusations, but that Ricca was also under investigation for falsifying registrations in Orange County. The Committee to Restore Oregon's Term Limits and the Taxpayer Association of Oregon Spending Limit PAC—the groups behind the term-limit initiative for legislators and the TABOR initiative to limit state spending—both report paying over $15,000 to Ricca Petitioning Services or Ricca & Associates.

 
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07.25.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Global warming? Nah.With all the mounting scientific evidence, only an idiot would propose such a question. Of course global warming is real. As most scientists now agree, it is being caused by human activity, as the earth should be entering a cooler phase as we exit the interglacial period. From analysis of Greenland ice cores going back over half a million years, scientists now have a better picture of earth's climate, and it is quite disturbing. Of course we knew about the ice ages, but scientists had no idea that earth's climate could change rapidly from cool to hot, or hot to cool in a matter of just a few decades. Yes, decades. Apparently, that has happened quite often. What triggers it? Climate science is very complicated, but it is directly related to ocean-atmospheric circulation and current patterns, which can be disrupted by: large scale volcanic eruptions, meteorite/asteroid strikes, release of massive amounts of methane gas from frozen hydrates at the bottom of most of earth's oceans, and many other factors, sometimes acting in concert.Right now, our current global warming is being caused by gases created and released by human activity, as well as by changes in rainfall and climate, caused by human changes to the geographical landscape (e.g., reduction in forest cover, etc.) At some point, we may even get into accelerated global warming patterns, due to what scientists call "feedback" loops. If we do, the earth's temperature will rise even more dramatically, and this could be life threatening, because if the world temperature rises 5 degrees centigrade, that is enough to release all the methane hydrate in the world's oceans and circumpolar region permafrost as methane gas. Unfortunately, for us and all iiving creatures, methane gas has 20 to 30 times the negative effect of carbon dioxide, because methane takes oxygen out of the atmosphere. In essence, this could lead to mass aphyxiation of most living creatures.Preposterous? To the contrary, a similar event occurred 251 million years ago at the boundary between the Permian-Triassic geological periods. At that time, 90 percent of the life on earth vanished in a very short time. Another similar event occurred only a few tens of million years ago during the Eocene-Holcene "thermal maximum", although not as many species disappeared.The only solution is to leave the fossil fuel age behind, and begin immediate and rapid conversion to renewable energy. Many proven technologies exist: hydro,wind, solar, wave, tidal, and geothermal. There is also a very new technology, which I have invented and am attempting to promulgate using deep water hydrostatic pressure (i.e., water weight) to generate electricity. My invention is dubbed the "hydrosphere". Anyone interested in it, may contact me at: hydroman1213@yahoo.com.Thank you,Rick DicksonInventorMilwaukie, Oregon—Rick Dickson

 

07.25.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Global warming? Nah.For shame for reporting on a poor family's suicide tragedy. CAZZA!—Don

 

07.26.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Global warming? Nah.Rick Dickson:Your causal link between modern day global warming issues and the Permian-Triassic Boundary extinction event is missleading and suspect at best. Extinction events are highly complex and to blame a singular event in climate change without recognizing the rigors of evolutionary theory is an excersice in false logic and policy science.On the flip side, your new invention sounds interesting and promising, I hope you are on to something.—SJ Gould

 

07.29.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Global warming? Nah.In reply to Mr.Gould's comment that there is no link between current global warming and past mass extinction events, as I stated in my July 26, 2006 editorial, I would simply say: read. Read all you can about environmental science and the latest theories with reference to past mass extinction events. Some good books that come to mind: "Abrupt Climate Change" and "The Great Dying." You may have to wade through a lot of turgid scientific writing, but the evidence is there and mounting. Methane is the real global warming gas to worry about: it has been causally linked via hard evidence to mass extinctions that ocurred rather rapidly both at the end of the Permian Period and during the Eocene-Holocene Thermal Maximum. There are godzillions of tons of the stuff frozen at the bottom of earth's oceans and in the circumpolar regions. When the earth warms sufficiently (estimated 5 degrees centigrade), sometime toward the end of this century, those hydrates will gasify, releasing enormous amounts of methane gas into the atmosphere. During the Permian event,it was enough to take oxygen levels in our atmosphere down from 21% to 10 or 12% very rapdily, asphyxiating many larger species on land and in the oceans. Still don't think it can happen? Google on the Environmental News Service out of Sydney, Australia and read the 7/19/99 article on oxygen levels already starting to fall in the atmosphere due to just the increasing levels of carbon dioxide. Albeit these are small declines so far, the trend is ominous. Now consider the effect of all that methane, which at 20 or 30 times as deleterious as carbon dioxide, when released from the oceans and permafrost, is going to gobble up oxygen at a frightening rate.The problem is most scientists are already pretty pessimistic on our longevity as both a civilization and a species; and since our President can't even sign the Kyoto Accords to reduce greenhouse gases due to the influence of vested interests, including an enormously powerful fossil fuel industry, we are probably doomed.Cheer up, though. If we all go, it won't be too bad. As oxygen levels drop rapidly, you'll just go to sleep and then never wake up. God is kind after all, even to a doomed planet.Rick Dickson—Rick Dickson

 

07.31.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Global warming? Nah.I would like to give your readers an additional reference source for education about greenhouse gas mass extinction events in Earth's past: "Gorgon: The Monsters That Ruled The Planet Before The Dinosaurs And How They Died Out In The Greatest Catastrophe In Earth's History", by Peter Ward. The book is available on both Amazon.com and at Powell's.Dr. Ward is a recognized mass extinction expert, and has done much innovative field work in the Permian-Triassic rock formations of the Karoo Basin of South Africa, where the evidence for methane gas caused mass extinction was first unearthed.Thank you,Rick DicksonMilwaukie—Rick Dickson

 

 
 

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