Sunday, December 12, 2010

Werk

One more Nutcracker and theni have a few days off!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

FoxNews.com - Mysterious Geminid Meteor Shower -- Best Sky Show of the Year

FoxNews.com - Mysterious Geminid Meteor Shower -- Best Sky Show of the Year: "SpaceWeather/Wally Pacholka
The upcoming Geminid meteor shower next week may promise to be the best sky show of the year, but for many scientists it's a space light show shrouded in mystery."

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

The end of 10

Here we are looking at the end of the year 2010 , I'm sitting and contemplating the Water Energy of 2011 that is coming.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Fall & the Coming of Samhain

Settling in to Fall and so far likin no Hurricanes this year and the early Fall.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Me on Set of The Glades


Me sitting on the Sir Lancelot Bike Built by Sick Bastards Cycles on Set of the Glades

Sunday, July 4, 2010

7 4 10

Independence of The Soul Day I Declare it 741. Today Human Kind will pear deep again into the Darkness within and will face their darkest aspect's here is where the battle front i=s People don't run from what You cannot turn away from, with the courage of a Knight and a King use the Pryde that resides inside of UR true Heart and let that ignite the energy of as one truly united with its higher purpose and SEE what the core issue is of ones Destiny. Thanks, King Arthur Pendragon Have a Happy Fourth of July Nondependence Day!!! 7410

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Department of Justice investigating spill

WASHINGTON — Calling the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico the “greatest environmental disaster of its kind,” President Barack Obama on Tuesday vowed to prosecute those responsible.
“If our laws were broken, leading to this death and destruction, my solemn pledge is that we will bring those responsible to justice ,” Obama said.
The president delivered those words as Attorney General Eric Holder announced a federal investigation into whether criminal or civil laws were violated in connection with the spill.
The government must “ensure that anyone found responsible for this spill is held accountable,” Holder said, after touring the Gulf and meeting with federal and state prosecutors. “That means enforcing the appropriate civil — and, if warranted, criminal — authorities to the full extent of the law.”
Holder last month dispatched Justice Department lawyers to the spill region to explore whether laws had been broken. Investigators have directed BP and other companies to preserve documents related to the disaster. Although government officials would not say who was being targeted in the criminal investigation, the probe could center on actions by well owner BP and rig owner Transocean.
BP said in a statement that it “will cooperate with any inquiry that the Department of Justice undertakes, just as we are doing in response to the other inquiries that already are ongoing.”
A Transocean spokesman said the company continues cooperating with authorities looking into the Deepwater Horizon incident, adding that it hadn't been named in any criminal investigation.
Holder said Justice Department lawyers were investigating a wide range of possible violations under a number of federal statutes, including clean water laws and the Endangered Species Act, which provides fines and prison time for people found guilty of harming or killing some wildlife.
BP bumped at briefings
The tough talk from Obama and Holder marks a shift in tone by the administration following criticism the White House has given BP too much power in managing the spill response.
White House and BP officials have tangled over the prospect that crude could begin flowing faster from the underwater gusher — at least temporarily — as the company cuts a stack of riser pipes in the first stage of its latest attempt to contain the leaking oil. When White House Energy Adviser Carol Browner said there could be a 20 percent boost in the flow of oil, BP officials downplayed the assertion.
The administration also put some distance between the White House and BP when it decided to push company officials out of daily briefings on the spill response. U.S. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen will now conduct those briefings on his own, without sharing the stage with BP executives.
While BP and government officials were beginning a risky “cut-and-cap” operation to contain the crude Tuesday, Obama was vowing a robust investigation of what went wrong when the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded April 20 — and to determine what regulatory lapses may have contributed to the disaster.
“We owe all those who have been harmed, as well as future generations, a full and vigorous accounting of the events that led to what has now become the worst oil spill in U.S. history,” the president said. “We have an obligation to investigate what went wrong and to determine what reforms are needed so that we never have to experience a crisis like this again.”
Commission co-chairs
As he delivered his remarks in the Rose Garden, Obama was flanked by the newly appointed co-chairmen of a bipartisan commission tasked with investigating the oil spill: former Florida Sen. Bob Graham and former Environmental Protection Agency Administrator William Reilly.
Graham is a Democratic former governor of Florida who served three terms in the Senate. Obama said Graham “earned a reputation as a champion of the environment, leading the most extensive environmental protection effort in (Florida's) history.”
Reilly, a Republican, currently serves as a director of ConocoPhillips, and is chairman emeritus of the World Wildlife Fund. His tenure heading the EPA overlapped with the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill near Alaska. The president described Reilly as “deeply knowledgeable of the oil and gas industry.”
Obama is expected to announce five other commission members soon; the president said his appointees will be “leaders in science and engineering.”
Report in 6 months
They could include people with deep ties to the oil and gas industry. Under Obama's May 22 executive order establishing the commission, the seven-member panel is to include members “with experience in or representing the scientific, engineering and environmental communities, the oil and gas industry, or any other area” the president deems appropriate.
The commission is tasked with finishing its report within six months, and its recommendations could change the future of oil and gas drilling in the United States.
Chronicle reporter Tom Fowler contributed to this report.
jennifer.dlouhy@chron.com
Link

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

I Bring the Golden Dawn!

Today I mark the Day of the New Golden Dawn ,this will over write the one there now
A New Age has begun and It aint their's Bwahahahahahahahahaha

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Monday, April 19, 2010

On the Night Shift.

Working night shift on a new TV series called The Glades cyas soon.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

The Day the Earth Froze!

http://fulldisklosure.org/blog/2010/04/04/the-day-the-earth-froze/

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

The Red Dragon Return's!

So he returns and I am able to Ride the Dragon again to Feel the wind the rain the fire and the earth to feel all the Element's again in a flow of spirit.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Are you Awake?

I look at some people and i see nothing in their eye's a pity really makes u almost feel sorry for them.

Monstrous, Damaging Storm Looms for the Northeast

While a snowstorm is currently underway across upstate New York and New England, the worst has yet to come for the Northeast. A monstrous storm is set to develop across the region on Thursday, unleashing damaging winds, coastal flooding and an all-out blizzard.

Unlike recent storms this winter, the dangers of the upcoming monster will not be confined to one part of the Northeast. The worst of the storm will rage from Thursday afternoon into Friday morning.

Strong winds will gust to or past 50 mph over a large portion of the Northeast, resulting in widespread tree damage and power outages.

Buildings and vehicles may also suffer damage, including from falling trees. In the hardest-hit areas, residents may remain without power for a week.

The winds will have no trouble significantly blowing and drifting the storm's heavy snow around. The snow will accumulate 1 to 2 feet over the Pocono and Catskill mountains and the mountains of northern New England.

Up to a foot of snow will bury much of New York state, northern Pennsylvania, northern New Jersey and the central Appalachians. New York City lies within this zone.

The snow will be heavy and wet near the monster storm's center. That could further make these areas susceptible to wind damage.

Cities set to be pounded by the storm's heavy snow and wind are Syracuse, Rochester, Binghamton, Williamsport, Allentown and New York City.

Residents may call the storm a "snow-hurricane" instead of a blizzard across the higher terrain of northern New England and some parts of central New York and eastern Pennsylvania. Winds here will gust to 70 mph, just shy of hurricane strength. Just to clarify, this storm is technically not an actual hurricane.

Heavy rain northeast of the storm's center threatens to cause flooding across eastern New England. The beaches should also prepare for severe coastal flooding. This includes Boston, Providence and Portland.

On the other hand, blowout tides caused by strong offshore winds may pose problems for coastal waterway interests from New Jersey to North Carolina.

In addition to widespread damage, the storm threatens to severely impact travel throughout the Northeast. Problems both on the ground and in the air can be expected.

Officials will likely be forced to close roads blocked by either snow, downed trees and power lines and flooding. Numerous flight cancellations will not only delay airline passengers at the region's airports, but also elsewhere across the nation.

Schools that do not start off closed may let out early on Thursday, then could remain closed into Friday.

Be sure to keep checking back with AccuWeather.com for the latest updates on this damaging and disruptive storm.