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Re: On Government Help For The Auto Makers [hpmctorque]
by gagrice on Sat Nov 15 07:25:09 PST 2008
It could be useful for the industry to appoint one or more respected, charismatic spokesperson to make its case with consumers. You mean like Oprah, Tom Hanks or DeCaprio? You will be hard pressed to find an Obama backing Celebrity that drives a Big 3 vehicle. "People look at the Prius like they looked at a Jaguar a few years ago." Reiner traded in his BMW, David sold his Lexus and Emanuel put away his Ferrari. And they're not the only ones. The list of Hollywood's hybrid-come-lately car owners reads like headlines on the cover of People Magazine: Cameron Diaz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Carole King, Billy Joel, David Duchovny, Patricia Arquette, Jackson Browne and Bill Maher, to name-drop a few. Larry David purchased three, including one for his character, "Larry David," to drive one on his HBO series, Curb Your Enthusiasm. "It works on every level," said David, who is married to a staunch environmentalist. "I'm doing something good, and my wife has sex with me more often." If you think driving a domestic vehicle is Patriotic, you can scratch most of Hollywood off the list. And most of CA for that matter. If it were not for big PU trucks and SUVs there were be NO domestics in CA. PS The ONLY celebrity type I hear pushing GM vehicles is RUSH LIMBAUGH..
Re: EXL True Market Value [nucargurl]
by jetboat76 on Sun Oct 19 05:46:30 PDT 2008
Just purchased a EX-L 4WD for $31,700 before TTL in Grand Rapids, Michigan. http://www.rivertownhonda.com/ Salesperson was Cameron, he was great to work with.
Cameron Diaz Goes Hydrogen route
by gagrice on Fri Oct 10 07:36:46 PDT 2008
This has a lot more style than a Civic FCX. CAMERON DIAZ SET TO RIDE IN THE BMW HYDROGEN 7 TO THE 2008 OSCAR AWARDS CEREMONY 02/22/2008 Diaz Joins Ed Norton, Will Ferrell, Jay Leno and Others Among the First Americans to Hit the Roads In BMW's Hydrogen-Powered Vehicle Hollywood, CA - February 22, 2008... Demonstrating her continued dedication to the exploration of environmentally sustainable energies, Cameron Diaz will be traveling to the 80th Annual Academy Awards ceremony in the BMW Hydrogen 7 Series. The BMW H7 is the first hydrogen-powered luxury sedan, which emits almost nothing but water vapor, and still features all the amenities and comfort of a BMW 7 Series. Diaz, who will present on the awards telecast, has been a leading advocate of environmental issues over the past five years by working with organizations such as the NRDC, Global Green, The Climate Project, and Live Earth.
Re: A few years back... [andre1969]
by tankbeans on Fri Sep 05 10:48:20 PDT 2008
I like it. You're probably right, but I also would be doing the whole thing Cameron's dad did in Ferris Bueller's Day Off, and stick it in a garage and polish it all the time while never driving it. If I have car I will drive it.
Actually Captain Smith of the Titanic...
by iluvmysephia1 on Sat Jul 26 17:49:08 PDT 2008
had a really grave look on his face, according to James Cameron's version of the stroy, anyway. Basically we're doomed and you'd better be a woman or a child or...rich like Billy Zane. Then hope you don't lose your fortune on the stock market collapse of the late 20's. Great story, the Titanic. "Actually, we're gonna go faster. I've fired up the last 6 boilers!" exclaims Captain Smith as some decide whether to have another strong drink or just wait around for the inevitable. Insert the Big 3 here for the Titanic. High ghastly prices?!! "I've just ordered the Hummer factories to produce at thrice the rate!" Broccoli stuck in their teeth and all. Oh, well. Hey, rock, ya gonna move on down here to Arizona and build solar-generated electric rigs with me? Let's start up our own company, man. :surprise:
Re: Just goes to prove [tidester]
by duke23 on Thu Jul 24 19:17:13 PDT 2008
If you had noticed, I did not imply that global warming was a function of c02 increase but rather stated that enough empirical eveidence was not in hand to base a logical conclusion. But as to cherry picking charts... Humbly, I only have these hardly reputable sources to cite, but you have? Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change. EPA Global Warming Site. Geography 1012: Planet Earth [lecture outlines]. Global Climate Change: Causes & Methods of Study. Introduction to Physical Geography II: Causes of Climate Change Merritts, D., DeWet, A. Menking, K. (1998). Environmental Geology: An Earth System Science Approach. W. H. Freeman and Company, New York, N.Y. Purves, W. K., Orians, G. H., H. C. (1995). Life: The Science of Biology. Fourth Edition. Sinauer Assosiates, Inc., Sunderland, MA. Rosenzweig, C. and Hiller, D. Potential Impact of Climate Change on Agriculture and Food Supply. Cornell University. Schlesinger, W. H. (1991). Biogeochemistry: An Analysis of Global Change. Academic Press, Inc., New York, NY. The Greenhouse Effect. *National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Institute for Space Studies, †Columbia University Earth Institute, and §Sigma Space Partners, Inc., 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025; and ΆDepartment of Earth Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106. References ↵Hansen J, Sato M, Ruedy R, Nazarenko L, Lacis A, Schmidt GA, Russell G, Aleinov I, Bauer M, Bell N, et al. (9 28, 2005) J Geophys Res 110, doi:10.1029/2005JD005776. ↵Pierrehumbert RT (2000) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97:1355–1358. FREE Full Text ↵Lea DW (2004) J Climate 17:2170–2179. CrossRef ↵Hansen J, Ruedy R, Sato M, Imhoff M, Lawrence W, Easterling D, Peterson T, Karl T (2001) J Geophys Res 106:23947–23963. CrossRef ↵Reynolds RW, Smith TM (1994) J Clim 7:929–948. CrossRef ↵Rayner N, Parker D, Horton E, Folland C, Alexander L, Rowell D, Kent E, Kaplan A (7 17, 2003) J Geophys Res 108, doi:10.1029/2002JD002670. ↵Hansen J, Lebedeff S (1987) J Geophys Res 92:13345–13372. ↵Hansen J, Ruedy R, Glascoe J, Sato M (1999) J Geophys Res 104:30997–31022. CrossRef ↵Comiso JC (2006) Weather 61:70–76. CrossRef ↵Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Houghton JT, Ding Y, Griggs DJ, Noguer M, van der Linden PJ, Dai X, Maskell K, Johnson CA (2001) in Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis, eds Houghton JT, Ding Y, Griggs DJ, Noguer M, van der Linden PJ, Dai X, Maskell K, Johnson CA (Cambridge Univ Press, Cambridge, UK). ↵Manabe S, Wetherald RT (1975) J Atmos Sci 32:3–15. CrossRef ↵Hansen J, Fung I, Lacis A, Rind D, Lebedeff S, Ruedy R, Russell G, Stone P (1988) J Geophys Res 93:9341–9364. ↵US Senate Commission on Energy and Natural Resources (1988) Greenhouse Effect and Global Climate Change (Govt Printing Office, Washington, DC). ↵Crichton M (2004) State of Fear (Harper Collins, New York). ↵U.S. Senate Commission on Environment & Public Works (2005) The Role of Science in Environmental Policy-Making (Govt Printing Office, Washington, DC). ↵Barnes F (2006) Rebel in Chief: Inside the Bold and Controversial Presidency of George W. Bush (Crown Forum, New York). ↵Hansen J (2005) Am Geophys Union, U23D-01. ↵Michaels PJ (2000) Soc Epistemol 14:131–180. ↵Fedorov AV, Philander SG (2000) Science 288:1997–2002. Abstract/FREE Full Text ↵Cane MA (2005) Earth Plan Sci Lett 230:227–240. ↵Bjerknes J (1969) Mon Wea Rev 97:163–172. ↵Collins M (2005) Clim Dyn 24:89–104. CrossRef ↵Ravelo AC, Andreasen DH, Lyle M, Olivarez Lyle A, Wara MW (2004) Nature 429:263–267. CrossRef ↵Held IM, Soden BJ (2006) J Clim 19:in press. ↵Knutson T, Manabe S (1995) J Clim 8:2181–2199. CrossRef ↵Vecchi G, Soden BJ, Wittenberg AT, Held IM, Leetmaa A, Harrison MJ (5 4, 2006) Nature doi:10.1038/nature04744. ↵Emanuel K (1987) Nature 326:483–485. CrossRef ↵Medina-Elizade M, Lea DW (2005) Science 310:1009–1012. Abstract/FREE Full Text ↵Stott L, Cannariato K, Thunell R, Haug GH, Koutavas A, Lund S (2004) Nature 431:56–59. CrossRef ↵Lea DW, Pak DK, Spero HJ (2000) Science 289:1719–1724. Abstract/FREE Full Text ↵Lea DW, Pak DK, Belanger CL, Spero HJ, Hall AM, Shackleton NJ (2006) Q Sci Rev 25:1152–1167. CrossRef ↵Dowsett H, Thompson R, Barron J, Cronin T, Fleming F, Ishman S, Poore R, Willard D, Holtz T (1994) Global Plan Change 9:169–195. ↵Kienast M, Hanebuth TJJ, Pelejero C, Steinke S (2003) Geology 31:67–70. Abstract/FREE Full Text ↵Hansen J (2005) Clim Change 68:269–279. CrossRef ↵Hare W (2003) Assessment of Knowledge on Impacts of Climate Change (German Advisory Council on Global Change, Berlin). ↵Parmesan C, Yohe G (2003) Nature 421:37–42. CrossRefMedline ↵Thomas CD, Cameron A, Green RE, Bakkenes M, Beaumont LJ, Collingham YC, Erasmus BFN, Siqueira MF, Grainger A, Hannah L, et al. (2004) Nature 427:145–148. CrossRefMedline ↵Flannery T (2005) The Weather Makers (Atlantic Monthly, New York). ↵Benton MJ (2003) When Life Nearly Died (Thames & Hudson, London). ↵Saraswat R, Nigam R, Weldeab S, Mackensen A, Naidu PD (12 17, 2005) Geophys Res Lett 32, doi:10.1029/2005GL024093. ↵Vimeux F, Cuffey KM, Jouzel J (2002) Earth Planet Sci Lett 203:829–843. CrossRef ↵Chapin FS, Sturm M, Serreze MC, McFadden JP, Key JR, Lloyd AH, McGuire AD, Rupp TS, Lynch AH, Schimel JP, et al. (2005) Science 310:657–660. Abstract/FREE Full Text ↵Archer D (2006) Rev Geophys, in press. ↵Hansen J, Sato M (2004) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101:16109–16114. Abstract/FREE Full Text ↵Cicerone RJ (2006) Clim Change 77:221–226. CrossRef ↵Crutzen PJ (2006) Clim Change 77:211–219. CrossRef http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/globalwarming/temperature-change.html Downloaded Thursday, 24-Jul-2008 21:43:43 EDT The present day is at the far right of the chart. What do we see? First of all, there’s quite a bit of fluctuation. There are long periods of time when the average global temperature was as much as 9 C degrees (16 F degrees) colder than now. These were ice ages. Much of the northern part of the world was covered with thick sheets of ice, much like we see today in Greenland and Antarctica. The most recent ice age ended about 12,000 years ago. There were also times when it was warmer than today. On the whole, we are in a relatively warm period. What causes these changes in climate? There are many factors. Even Industry.link title And to be totally fair, here's even a reference for your argument from those idiots at MIT. But don't they play good blackjack. link title Cherry pick, methinks thy doth call k

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