Showing posts with label water from alaska. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water from alaska. Show all posts

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Build a New Platform for the Economy

The water from Alaska project, NAWAPA fits as the thing to restart the US economy and give it a platform to get the the future.  It most fit the thing, and it was a defined area of approach to this kind of
thing.  Because the tendency was, to in terms, to follow, the precedent of what's considered economy in the  United States, today!   

 So, the only way to do that, was to give a very concrete
demonstration of the principle, and that principle was, NAWAPA.
NAWAPA was the only thing that fit a concept, an existing
concept, which would prevent this kind of confusion, which was
erupting. 

And so therefore, the way -- the fact is, the idea of crazy
economics, got in on the way of scientific work, with the
idea of political economy, how an economy works, it was marginal
utility!  So what happened, somebody tried to apply to the whole
process, the principle of marginal utility, which is late 19th
century British ideology, to this, and of course, it was a farce.
But the point was, not only a farce, but the point is, the
mentality of recognizing the error, to come to a correct
conclusion about what the error had been, was lacking.   

The NAWAPA project: was the only thing we've got, on hand, which is the only way we're going to get
people to organize what's needed to solve this problem.  And so, that's how we did it.
          

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Water from Alaska

Hey Harlem dudes, there's plenty of water from Alaska available to change the biosphere. With giant infrastructure projects like NAWAPA, aka water from Alaska, man is changing the biosphere. He is actually reorganizing the physical space-time of the biosphere, as a system, by transforming and redirecting the biogenic flows through the biosphere, allowing it to attain to higher and higher levels of energy flux density. The simplest example of this is the introduction of farming and animal husbandry: the apples, corn, and livestock of today are far different, and far more efficient in terms of energy density, than their wild counterparts which reflect the state in which man first encountered them. Changing the biosphere is something man has always done, its time now, Harlem dudes, to do it on a grander scale, not just to create jobs but to be truly human.