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Sunday, June 30, 2024

MIRACLES

Miracles are important in The Bible.  Here are seven of them.  Jesus is prominent in the field of miracles.  Buddha similarly had supernatural feats, as did Hindu Shiva.  All religions depend on miracles, with the revelation of the Quran being the greatest by Muslims.  And, of course there too are modern-day miracles.

Joe Biden needs a couple of miracles to prevail over Donald Trump.  One of them could come tomorrow from the Supreme Court.  If Trump is announced not to be immune from prosecution, that could become a game-changer.  A sentence of 4 years in jail by Judge Juan Merchan in eight days will only add to Trump's desperation.

Whether you believe The Bible or scientists, the sudden appearance of Earth or the Big Bang from essentially nothing....they are all difficult to explain, and each one surely falls in the category of miracles.  The creation of life qualifies, then the evolution of us, Homo sapiens, deserves mention.

From the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, 79% of Americans believe in miracles.  Republicans more than Democrats.  Another more recent report indicated that only 15% of Americans did not believe in miracles.  Earlier this year, The Hill announced a figure of 83% belief.


I'm about as irreligious as one can get.  For example, when I die, there will be no Heaven or Hell for me.  Not sure yet if it will be eternal gloom or ultimate peace.  I want to believe the latter will prevail.

According to Wikipedia:

A miracle is an event that is inexplicable by natural or scientific laws[2] and accordingly gets attributed to some supernatural or praeternatural cause. Various religions often attribute a phenomenon characterized as miraculous to the actions of a supernatural being, (especially) a deity, a miracle worker, a saint, or a religious leader.


As I think about it, following the above definition, my life has been a series of "miracles."

  • Being born defied one in 400 trillion odds.  Don't believe me?  Watch this video.  Or, this one, it's more convincing.  In any case, every one of us experienced this miracle.
  • At one point does overcoming insurmountable odds qualify for miracle status?  Let's look at sports.  Here is a top ten:
    • #10  With 15 games left in the 2011 season, the St. Louis Cardinals were 4 ½ games behind the Atlanta Braves for the National League wild card spot. Las Vegas sportsbooks had them listed at 999-1 to win the World Series. Then Atlanta collapsed, the Cards went 11-4 in their final 15, and won the World Series over the Texas Rangers. While it takes a lot to make baseball exciting and interesting, a 999-1 run does the job.
    • #9    Again, St. Louis, the Rams in 1991 won the Super Bowl against 300-1 odds.  You would think that 300-1 should be less of a miracle than 999-1, but this list is iffy anyway.
    • #1    In the 1980 Winter Olympics, the U.S. Hockey team defied 1000 to 1 odds by beating the Soviet Union for the Gold medal.
    • But 1000-1 is hardly a miracle, even though Al Michael's Miracle on Ice thought otherwise.  Here is what he felt.
  • Let me now move on, beginning with my life as a sophomore in high school.  
    • Earlier this month, this is what I said in one of my blog postings about my moving on from McKinley High School to Stanford University.
      • One of the miracles of my life was that I even went there at all.  I was an average student most of my life.  Perhaps growing up in Kakaako, a lower-class portion of Honolulu, was partly responsible.  Maybe wanting to be like one of my gang was not personally productive.  Whatever, by the time I was a sophomore at McKinley High School, I was put in a lower level English-Social Studies group, as our school system placed students by performed capability.
      • You can read more by clicking on that posting, but I ended up being accepted by Stanford and the California Institute of Technology, but chose the former.
      • In any case, that surely was overcoming one in a million odds, and maybe 1 in a billion.  I count that as a miracle.
    • After graduating, have had an exceptional adult life and professional career, relative to the more than 100 billion humans ever born.  How many in that motley group  accomplished the equivalent of the following?
      •  PhD in biochemical engineering.
      • Jobs in biomass engineering, renewable energy and ocean resources in Hawaii, and the search for extraterrestrial intelligence at the NASA Ames Research Center, laser fusion for the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and originator of legislation working for the U.S. Senate for what became laws in hydrogen, ocean thermal energy conversion, wind energy and seabed minerals.
      • Have been on more than a dozen around the world trips, flying at least 3 million miles so far in my life.
      • This blog site has had more than 3 million viewers from 221 domains (countries plus smaller territories).
    • Finally, when I was born in 1940, my life expectancy was supposed to be to 70.4 years.  I've exceeded that by more than 13 years.  Okay, so that's not a miracle.  But amazing nevertheless for continuing to be production to save Planet Earth and Humanity, and looking forward to many more years to come.
Perhaps there might be one more miracle, although I'm not particularly counting on this to happen.  Some have said that you won't go to Heaven without having something called faith.  Yet, religious scholars like St Augustine have said otherwise.  So, maybe one more to come.

I close with a note that Category 4 Hurricane Beryl has formed in the Caribbean, and should make landfall over the Yucatan Peninsula late on July the 4th.  Took only 42 hours to strengthen from a tropical depression to a major hurricane at 130 MPH.
Beryl is expected pass just south of Barbados tomorrow on the above path.  She became the earliest Category 4 Atlantic hurricane on record.  Atlantic waters are the highest on record for this time of year, and are already about the peak high of September.
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Saturday, June 29, 2024

A NEXT STEP TOWARDS THE BLUE REVOLUTION

Had lunch yesterday with a colleague from Norway, Lars Golmen, and his family.  We mostly talked about world affairs and our past.  However, the discussion eventually settled on next generation fisheries, ocean thermal energy conversion, the Blue Revolution, and our possible plans to re-establish a global plan to accomplish these various tasks.

Lars was the organizer in Norway, with Steven Masutani of Hawaii, for the Bergen Declaration.

THE BERGEN DECLARATION ON NEXT GENERATION FISHERIES 

November 15, 2005


Whereas, fishing fleets need to travel greater distances for diminishing catches.


Whereas, some aquacultured products may suffer from the concentration of chemical toxins or drugs, and may be affected by diseases.


Whereas, the consumption of seafood is increasing relative to beef, chicken and pork, being stimulated by the growing human population and recognized nutritional benefits of bioproducts from the sea.


Whereas, the seafood industry faces increasing challenges posed by fish stock depletion worldwide and international fishing regulations.


Whereas, public forums and hearings on fisheries throughout the world focus primarily on developing measures to conserve natural marine stocks and associated sanctions for violators.


As all world fisheries are in various stages of decline, resulting in increased competition, rising seafood prices, and overall degradation of marine ecosystems.


But, that:

  • 40% of all fish currently caught come from less than one percent of the ocean, where natural upwelling occurs and

  • at depths below about 500 meters, cold deep ocean water with attractively high concentrations of nutrients ideally suited to promote growth in the photic zone if brought to the surface is readily available.

    The conferees, recognizing that:

    • the ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) technology which utilizes large volumes of deep ocean water can also be applied to power and fertilize the growth cycle for Next Generation Fisheries (NGF) in the open ocean in artificial marine systems which feeds themselves only with the additional input of solar energy; and

    • a range of developmental initiatives, including caged offshore mariculture and the associated state-of-the-art technologies, will need to be explored and supported in a step-by-step bridging strategy to achieve artificial-upwelling- driven NGF.

      Contact information:
      Stephen Masutani, Hawaii: stephenm@hawaii.edu Lars Golmen, Norway: lars.golmen@niva.no 

This next generation fisheries agreement actually proceeded to step 2, a follow-up gathering in Tokyo to further build international cooperation.  Unfortunately, the activity subsequently stalled.

The future of fishing and seafood, of course, is just one facet of the Blue Revolution, powered by ocean thermal energy conversion, or OTEC.  Since that Bergen summit, I have published articles in the Huffington Post to popularize this possible future:

More recently, I gave a TEDx talk entitled, The Time for the Blue Revolution is now.  You can watch the 18 minute presentation (the TED organizers have an absolute requirement that no lectures can exceed that limit).  Twelve years ago I also made a presentation to the Seasteading Institute in San Francisco on exactly what the blue revolution plant ship would look like when built and operated.  We only lack $150 million to get this started.  Governments nor companies will do this.  We seek an enlightened billionaire.

A group of us around a dozen years ago formed Blue Revolution Hawaii to find that billionaire.  Here is the Story of the Blue Revolution, some other details, and a blog site for billionaires.  Progress has stalled, so the lunch I had with Lars could well lead to an upgrade in activity.

Lars thought that we might want to work with OTEA, headed by president Yasu Ikegami and secretary Benjamin Martin.  OTEA, for Ocean Thermal Energy Association, has 500 members from 48 countries and regions.  Lars is on their executive committee.


Here is a photo taken
11 years ago of Saga University Professor Yasu Ikegami, (at the top) with Tokyo University Professor Masayuki Takahashi to the right and me.

Masayuki wrote a book on deep ocean water applications, while I did one on OTEC.  My cover, showing the name of co-author Andrew Trenka.
The book was sponsored by UNESCO of the United Nations, following a 2003 lecture I gave them in Paris.
Both Takahashi professors are now long retired, but there is OTEA and new energy.  Lars will meet some of their representatives when he next goes to Japan.


But about our Orchids lunch at the Halekulani Hotel in Waikiki, some photos.

I started with a Japanese version of Bloody Mary, then a glass of Chardonnay with the Halekulani fish special.
Incidentally, there is another Blue Revolution web page.  After Joe Biden's debate performance, this organization needs a lot of help.
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Friday, June 28, 2024

THE ENIGMATIC PHIL SPECTOR

The first presidential debate of Donald Trump and Joe Biden ended up in a near tie.  Both lost.  However, it was an unmitigated disaster for Biden, who just might be too old to win this re-election. For Trump, it was a reinforcement of what he does all the the time, lie.  


There will be significant calls for the Democratic Party to work out "something" to replace Biden as their presidential candidate.  Suddenly, Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom and Michelle Obama are added to the spotlight.  But what can "legally" occur at the August Democratic Convention?

The situation is different on the Republican side, as Trump is the Republican Party, and no matter if he gets 4 years at his felony sentencing on July 9, or even if the Supreme Court determines he is not immune next week or later, he will be the presidential candidate. Trump is a damned boastful liar and convicted felon, but that is the only option for Republicans.  His vice-presidential choice now becomes crucial.

The nation will be challenged over the next 129 days.  Trump could well be facing prison time and Biden might need to be moved to a nursing home.  It will most likely be Biden vs Trump on November 5.  But our country will lose democracy if Trump gets elected.  What can the Democratic Party do to prevent this looming disaster?  Well, Biden seemed to have recovered from his miasma in North Carolina today, and perhaps that debate was just a bump in the road.

Oh well, things surely will improve for the USA in the coming days.  About my topic of the day, I was watching Prime Music on TV, and at the end of each song, listed is the person or people who wrote it.  Time and again, I saw the name, Philip Spector.  There is a book about him, Phil Spector:  Sound of the Sixties, 1985 by Sean MacLeod.  Another,  He's a Rebel:  The Truth About Phil Spector - Rock and Roll's Legendary Madman, 1989, by Mark Ribowski.  And another, Wall of Pain:  The Biography of Phil Spector, 2004, by Dave Thompson.

I was long aware of his "wall of sound," and previously wrote about him many times.  Here is one posting.  I did not realize until a half century after his Teddy Bears days that not only was he one of the three, with the hit, to Know Him is to Love Him, but he actually wrote that song and many others.

Spector's songs (one hour documentary), alphabetically (there are many more):
You say, big deal, Irving Berlin and many others wrote more hits.  Ah, but not many lived the life of Phil Spector.  I wrote about him in 2013 (became one of my most viewed postings--see the column to the right in the original format) and again only two years ago.  So as you can read these articles, I'll only summarize.
    • Born Harvey Philip Spector to Russian-Jewish immigrants on 26December1939 in the Bronx.
    • Father commited suicide in 1949.  On his gravestone was inscribed:  To Know Him Was To Love Him.
    • Formed the Teddy Bears with that hit in 1958, which reached #1 on Billboard and sold a million copies.  This was his only band ever, never again actually being recorded.
    • At the age of 21 became the youngest-ever U.S. label owner and was dubbed the First Tycoon of Teen.  
    • He controlled every phase of the recording process.
    • Married in 1963 Annette Merar, lead vocalist of the Spectators Three.
    • Began an affair with Ronnie Bennett, lead singer of the Ronettes.  
    • Divorced Merar in 1966.
    • Married Ronnie in 1968.  Adopted three children.  She escaped Spector's mansion in 1972, and they got divorced in 1974.
    • In her 1990 memoir, Be My Baby, Ronnie alleged being imprisoned by Phil and subjected her to years of psychological torment.
    • In the 70's produced Let It Be of the Beatles, and several solo records by John Lennon and George Harrison's My Sweet Lord.
    • Won the 1973 Grammy Award for Album of the Year.
    • In 1974 was seriously injured in a car crash, and was thrown through the windshield.  He almost died from head injuries.  Got 700 stitches.  Later began wearing outlandish wigs.
    • Got involved in 1977 with Leonard Cohen's Death of a Ladies' Man.
    • Became reclusive from the 1980s on drugs and an increasingly erratic behaviour.
    • Re-emerged in 1981, co-producing Yoko Ono's Season of Glass. That is the entire album.
    • Had twins with girlfriend Janis Zavala in 1982.
    • Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 and Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1997.
    • Gun was used to kill actress Lana Clarkson in 2003.
    • In 2004, was ranked #63 on Rolling Stones's greatest artists in history.
    • While awaiting trial, in 2006 married his third wife, Rachelle Short, who was 26 and he was 67.
    • First trial in 2007 ended in a hung jury.
    • Produced a hit by Mutya Buena and Amy Winehouse that year, B Boy Baby.  Also did Amy Winehouse's To Know Him is to Love Him.  She died of substance abuse in 2011.
    • In second trial sentenced to 19 years in prison, where died of COVID-19 in 2021.
    ***********************************************************************y
    Good time clean out the photos on my desktop, so some photos on my lifestyle at 15 Craigside.  First, spaghetti lunch.
    We get shave ice every so often in the summer.
    Artichoke, tomato soup and sashimi for lunch.
    Sashimi and Pork Tonkatsu for dinner.
    A Hawaiian Luau.
    Truffles carpaccio on buttered croissant toast, with salad and soup.
    My weekly golf.  The first two are bad.  Oleander and Monkey Pod pollen.
    June is a time for colored shower and other types of flowering trees.
    This is the national tree of Thailand.
    I rode a cart, but still walked 6791 steps.  When golfing, my steps are only around 30 inches long, so I walked around 3 miles.

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