Monday, December 10, 2012

Finals!!!




The story of every single person on campus's live right now, as I make this post at a little past 1 in the morning. But it could be worse, this could be my life:


But lucky for me, we aren't having a final exam for this class! So this is not a worry for me, at least not in this class. However, this one last meme, may just apply to me, except instead of beer substitute TV and recreational reading. 


Reader Profile

What does my reader know about the subject already?

Preferably my reader would know next to nothing about this subject matter that way it feels more informative than it would to someone who knows a lot about the food cultures of the world, especially those of Mexico, Spain, and Germany. Although they may need a working knowledge of the basics of genetics, since by paper does lean heavily on the science of the idea.


What do I hope to teach my reader?

I hope to teach my reader the differences between the food cultures of Mexico, Spain, Germany, and America. I also hope to teach my reader about how those different food cultures are passed down just as much as skin color is, because historically diets were based off of what was available, therefore different nationalities have certain resistances or even weaknesses in some areas of nutrition. Furthermore, I hope they learn that although DNA does play a big part in shaping us, it can also be our choices and environment as well that shape us.


Why is my paper more important than other sources to my reader?

My paper is more important because it is a very personalized look into the food cultures of my particular ancestors, and generally it is more interesting to people when the writer has a personal stake in what they are writing about, writing about my heritage and their food cultures and how it effects and interacts with my food culture as an American gives me a personal stake in what I am saying.


How do I plan on reaching my reader and informing, entertaining, and enlightening them?

For entertaining them I will add personal anecdotes about the realities of my research that I’ve seen in my families cooking, like when I read that Mexican food culture involves a lot of corn based foods, like tortillas served with every meal, I said a hearty “Amen!” because it is so true, we love our tortillas! And I’m not sure about being enlightening but I’ll sure give it a try!


What will you consider a success with this assignment?

Honestly, I would consider finishing it to be a great success, as I am a horrible procrastinator. However for the sake of my grade I must add that I would really like an A, but if you don’t like my idea, I’ll be really sad and have to try to figure out how to write a 5 page paper on genetically modified food, which frankly I have no idea how to do. Furthermore, for the sake of the art of writing I would consider success on this paper would be learning more about the Spanish and German food culture and how that has affected me without my knowledge, as I’m not close with those sides of my family, and sharing these revelations with whichever unfortunate souls have to read my paper!

My Research Paper


The Effects of Lineage and Environment on Food Culture

            As Americans we all have very different backgrounds and nationalities that make up our families’ heritages. These different nations and cultures all have very diverse food cultures. These varied nations didn’t just have different food sources but different ecological environments presented to them that have forever shaped their genetic makeup. For example, historically the Inuit people and Norwegian fisherman, who lived in very cold regions, developed a response to frost bite called the Lewis wave. The Lewis wave is a pulsing of the blood in the extremities to protect against frost bite, while the blood mainly stays close to vital organs to prevent organ failure due to the cold temperatures. During the Korean War, African American soldiers were much more prone to frostbite than the other soldiers as a result of their lack of a response to fight frost bite (Moalem 36). Another example comes from our biochemical response to sunlight. Sunlight helps your body create vitamin D, but destroys your body’s reserves of folic acid. Different populations have evolved a combination of adaptations to help protect folic acid and ensure sufficient vitamin D (Moalem 50). These adaptations can most clearly be seen in our skin color, which are directly linked to the amount of sun that a particular population was exposed to for long periods of time. Darker skin protects against the absorption of UV light, which protects against sunburns and the loss of folic acid (Moalem 53). As a result of this extra protection, in the form of much more of the dark melanin, a specialized pigment that absorbs light, produced in those with darker skin tones (Moalem 53) African Americans are much less likely to get melanoma. According to Sharon Moalem, author of Survival of the Sickest, “European Americans are ten to forty times as likely to get melanoma as African Americans” (54). These genetically linked predispositions, based entirely on what region of the world your ancestors were from, lead me to believe that the same may be true for dietary needs. Perhaps our ancestors’ environments have given us certain predispositions in specific areas of our diets. Personally, I am of Mexican, Spanish, and German decent, but have been raised in the vastly diverse American food culture. Genetically speaking, I have been encoded with certain needs that differ from other nationalities; even, or more especially, from the American food I’ve had my entire life. Are our preferences and needs in food culturally and genetically passed down to us by our families or are they a product of the environment in which we are brought up in?
            I am predominately Mexican and therefore it is the culture I most closely associate with my heritage, especially since all of my relatives are at least half Mexican. In my experience, in the Mexican culture, food is so much more than just what gets put on the table: it is a social experience, and a mother or grandmother’s area of expertise. This idea of the kitchen being the woman’s domain is strong in the Mexican culture. Even if you aren’t hungry they will cook you something to eat, even if you insist that you don’t want anything, you will be brought more food than you ever have any hope of finishing. Stereotypically this is a display of love in most Mexican families and if I didn’t think it would kill me I would live off of just my grandmother’s tortillas. The Mexican food culture today is quiet varied, from its pre-Columbian influences, to the influences of the indigenous Indians, Spanish, and French. In the past, diets were limited by the geographic proximity to local fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy products, and protein sources. To most people the Mexican diet is very unhealthy, as frying is the most popular cooking method; therefore everything is high in fat. Also Mexicans tend to have a diet rich in complex carbohydrates, which are accounted for most generously by the corn and flour tortillas served with almost every meal, as well as rice and breads. Protein is likewise quite common in form of beans, eggs, fish, pork, and poultry. The fruits and vegetables that are most common are tomatoes, squash, sweet potato, avocado, mango, pineapple, and papaya. However while the Mexican diet is rich in the areas of complex carbohydrates and protein, it is much less so in the form of calcium, iron, and vitamins A and C (Smith). This dietary culture could be responsible for predispositions like an adaptation that allows for easier breakdown of complex carbohydrates or perhaps a less pressing need to ingest sources of vitamin D, given the sunny clime from which the Mexican people were created.
It is not at all coincidental that the Spanish dietary culture closely resembles that of Mexico, as they probably inherited this culture from their mother country Spain, therefore directly affected my culture and the food culture passed down through my ancestors. Spain was highly influenced by their historical ruling forces, the Romans and the Moors, and with this change of ruling powers a wide range of cooking styles and ingredients made their way into Spain. Given that Spain isn’t very agriculturally sound, due to poor soil quality, much of their ingredients for their traditional meals came from trade, other than Mediterranean staples like, grapes, oranges, and olives. Unlike Mexico, Spain’s main meat sources come from sheep and fishing (mussels, sardines, anchovies, squid) (Pohlman). This particular diet doesn’t lack for resources of vitamin C (oranges and other citrus fruits) or sources of lean protein. The Spanish blood in my heritage may have created predispositions involving adaptations around the tolerance and digestion of seafood or maybe even further back created a predisposition to need less nutrients, because if the land didn’t yield much, natural selection would select those who could do without.  
            My German heritage is a little elusive to me, which is probably why I don’t think it has had much an effect on my food culture. I’ve never met any of my German-American relatives, the product of Mexican migrant workers and German settlers in the hill country of Texas, who weren’t more Mexican than German. However, German food culture is very present in American food culture if only for the words hamburger and frankfurter, and more so in the forms of bratwurst, egg noodles, and other American dishes that have German origins. The predominant form of beer in the United States is lager beer, which was brought by German immigrants (Essman). The traditional German cuisine is often quite regionalized but some of the most popular dishes are Blood Sausage, made from barely and meat blood, Sauerkraut, fermented chopped up cabbage, and Spatzle, egg noodles served in soup, and a variety of different types of sausages and cured meats (Parry). This hearty meat and potato diet is not uncommon in most of America as more than one fourth of the population is of German descent (Essman). Predispositions that may have arisen from this part of my lineage might possibly include a higher alcohol tolerance, given that beer was so popular, perhaps natural selections selected for those who had higher tolerances for alcohol, as historically fermented drinks were the safest choice of beverage, or maybe a predisposition involving an adaptation for the tolerance and digestion of red meats.
America is a relatively new nation created by immigrants, bringing with them their many different food cultures, therefore America has never had one particular culinary tradition to guide our dietary choices (Pollan 5).  The American food culture, if it can be called that, according to Michael Pollan author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, is more like a national eating disorder that causes mood swings from one fad to another (2). Pollan also states that if we had a more stable culture of food we would not be so susceptible to diet books and other quackery. We would not eat our one fifth of our meals in cars and feed one third of our children fast food everyday (Pollan 3). Compared to some of our European contemporaries, who decide their dinner decisions based on ideas like pleasure and tradition, eat all manner of “unhealthy” foods and still wind up being healthier and happier than we are, the American food culture is quite simple, a culture of convenience, because our citizens don’t have time to cook (Pollan 3) (Rosengarten 7). Although this culture could be linked back to our founding, the citizens of Jamestown, Virginia had greater worries than creating a grand cuisine, they were fighting to stay alive, and in the ethical approach of “eating to live” rather than “living to eat”, we have become very economical in the amount of time we are willing to put into our food. Another theory is that America lacked the motivating drive of needing to create a type of national food for a royal court (Rosengarten 7). But whatever the driving forces, the characteristics of America’s dominant food culture, according to John Ikerd of the University of Missouri, are “cost, convenience, and appearance”. We want our food to be cheap, require little effort to get, and look good. However, Ikerd also qualifies that “a growing number of Americans are expressing doubts and dissatisfaction with the current American food system” especially in regard to the “safety and nutritional value of their food.”  As well we should be. American food, while quick and easy to come by, whether at a supermarket or at a fast food chain, is in most cases void of much nutrition and high in calories and fats (Moalem 162). This lack of nutrition isn’t just effecting the current generations but the future generations as well. There is new evidence that a predisposition to obesity may be linked to the eating habits of women in the first stages of their pregnancies (Moalem 156). In the first few weeks of pregnancy if a woman is eating a junk food filled diet the embryo will receive signals that it is going to be born into an environment where nutrition is scarce and when the baby is born it will be smaller and require less food to survive. However when the child is raised in the food abundant 21st century America they become obese (Moalem 163). These correlations are not just found from mother to offspring, recent studies are showing that maternal grandmother’s have been having profound genetic influence on their grandchildren. When your mother was still insider her mother’s womb the egg that created you was already developed, therefore the genetic signals sent to your mother from your grandmother, were in essence passed to the egg that would one day make up half of your DNA (Moalem 166). These studies follow along with the idea that our dietary needs are not all the same and are without a doubt influenced by our genetics.
Culturally, America has pulled together many different immigrant cultures to form the melting pot culture we have today. Which has unfortunately led to the rather disastrous results of, according to Moalem, gallons of sugary soda, baskets of fatty fries, and too many hours watching television and playing videogames (156). My particular melting pot included Mexican, Spanish, and German heritages, but in terms of food culture, have they had any effect on me in comparison to the American food culture of my much more recent lineage? I think it is a mixture of both. I believe we have predispositions within us, that were determined long ago, like our skin pigmentation and production of vitamin D, or our response to extreme cold, but other genetic predispositions are much more recent, passed from grandmother, through mother, to offspring, or just from the mother. However as Moalem points out, DNA is not destiny, its history. Our genetic codes cannot determine our life, although it can be a contributing factor in shaping it. (XV) That is the way natural selection works, those predispositions previously mentioned, served a purpose at one point, they increased the chances of survival in their current environments, even though they now may not be of much use (Moalem 47) What it really comes down to is your environment and your choices (Moalem XVI). You have to make the most of the predispositions you have been given and do your best to work well in your given environment, just like every human, animal, and plant has done since the beginning of time.
Cited Works
Polhman, . "Introduction to Spanish Food and Culture."Bowling Green State University College of Education and Human Development . N.p.. Web. 4 Dec 2012. <edhd.bgsu.edu/~sbanist/611/final/patkrisjess/pkjpr4spanfood_files/pkjpr4spanfood.ppt>.
Smith, Keith, ed. "Cultural Diversity: Eating in American, Mexican-American." Ohio State University. N.p., n.d. Web. 4 Dec 2012. <http://ohioline.osu.edu/hyg-fact/5000/pdf/5255.pdf>.
Essman, Elliot. "German Food in the United States." Life in the USA. N.p., n.d. Web. 4 Dec 2012. <http://www.lifeintheusa.com/food/german.htm>
Parry, Kathyrn. "German Cuisine- Traditional German Food." Health Guidance . N.p.. Web. 4 Dec 2012. 
Rosengarten, David. "We Are What We Eat: We are a Nation of Immigrants!." US Society and Values. US State Department. Web. 4 Dec 2012. <http://infousa.state.gov/life/people/docs/ijse0704.pdf>.
Ikerd, John. "The New American Food Culture." University of Missouri. N.p.. Web. 4 Dec 2012. <http://web.missouri.edu/~ikerdj/papers/SFTFoodCulture.htm>.
Moalem, Sharon. Survival of the Sickest: A Medical Maverick Discovers Why We Need Disease. 1st ed. New York City: HaperCollins Publishers, 2007. Print.
Pollan, Michael. The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals. London: Penguin Books, 2006. Print.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

I have an IDEA!!!

It is a little less than 10 hours before my conference with you, Mr. Shattuck, and I finally have an idea that I like for my essay! I am so jazzed about this fact that I feel like I can take on the world so this meme feels very appropriate and I feel like I should share:


Kitty Meme

Now, a break from all this seriousness!


This picture just covers so much for me....

  1. It could remind me of what my cat does when I come home for weekends, because he does something quite similar and its just as adorable.
  2. It could remind me of what I feel like Sleep says to me every time my alarm clock goes off, especially when I have homework to do.
  3. Or it could quite possible remind me of what my roommate and I do every time we say something mean to each other in a joking manner, that accidentally gets taken serious.
Or it could be all three. In any case, this is funny and adorable. So there.

Questions to ask about your Research Paper

Who is your audience?
What criteria does your research paper need to meet?
What questions does a good research paper answer?

What is the issue?
What is the importance?
Can it be changed?
How do you change it?

Criteria-Audience, appeal to audience, good examples, credible sources, relevance/significance

Characteristics of Reliable and Unreliable Sources

Characteristics of a Reliable Source

  • Known author with credentials 
  • Has evidence/facts, that can be proven
  • Well known (.gov, .edu, AP(Associated Press)
  • For a journal to have reliability they must have a high readership
Characteristics of an Unreliable Source
  • No author
  • Unqualified/lacking credentials
  • Opinion heavy

In Class Writing Exercise

The first time you questioned authority?

As a child my mother had me convinced that I was allergic to chocolate. I'm not sure exactly when I figured out that I wasn't, but somewhere along the way my story became "I'm only allergic to chocolate in large doses." Then as I got older I realized what my mom had done, by telling me I was allergic to chocolate, she put down a rule that I couldn't eat it. Now I don't question the fairness of the rule, because now as an adult I don't have much of a taste for sweets, but I do question her implementation of said rule. Though I have to wonder if I would do the same in her place, especially given our candy coated world, where every other commercial seems to be about chocolate or some other sugary snack.

Notecard Method

Do all your research and keep notecards as you go!

1. Bibliography cards

  • Title, all other citation information
  • Assign number to the card
  • Write that number on all the following cards
2. Direct Quote cards
  • Write a direct quote, with page number, and a DQ
  • Write bibliography card number
3. Precis Note (Summary Card)
  • Summarize a lengthy passage
  • Write page numbers and SC
  • Write bibliography card number
4. Personal Note Card
  • Write down ideas, notes to yourself, notes about your sources, or about your paper
  • Write a P on it

Appeals

Pathos-Emotions
Logos-Logic
Ethos-Character

Deduction and Induction

  • Deduction- Ex. All people are mortal. (Major premise) Socrates is a person. (Minor premise) Therefore, Socrates is mortal. (Conclusion)
  • Syllogism- If X, then Y.
  • Inductive- Ex. Today, I left for work at eight o’clock and I arrived on time. Therefore, every day that I leave the house at eight o’clock, I will arrive to work on time
  • Enthymematic Statements- Ex. Secondhand smoke can cause lung cancer. (Major premise) Because people are allowed to smoke in our favorite restaurants, secondhand smoke is present there. (Minor premise) Smoking should be banned from our favorite restaurants.
  • Analogy- Comparison, the relationship between ideas, hypothetical= reality, extended simile.  

How to Write a Research Paper

Finding a topic:

  • American or International meal consumption
  • Food
  • Horticulture
  • GMO's (Genetically Modified Organisms
3 Demands of a paper
  1. Needs to examine a significant issue
  2. Must address a knowledgeable reader and elevate that reader to the next plateau of knowledge
  3. Must have a serious purpose and argue from a position
Identify your audience:
  • Respond accordingly to your audience
  • Meet the needs of your readers
  • Invite your readers to the discussion

Peace

As we venture into our last three weeks of the semester I felt like I could use a more peaceful state of mind and nothing is more peaceful to me than Robert Frost.
Gotta love those AABB rhyme structures, so easy to understand.


Once by the Pacific by Robert Frost

The shattered water made a misty din.
Great waves looked over others coming in,
And thought of doing something to the shore
That water never did to land before.
The clouds were low and hairy in the skies,
Like locks blown forward in the gleam of eyes.
You could not tell, and yet it looked as if
The shore was lucky in being backed by cliff,
The cliff in being backed by continent;
It looked as if a night of dark intent
Was coming, and not only a night, an age.
Someone had better be prepared for rage.
There would be more than ocean-water broken
Before God's last 'Put out the Light' was spoken.

Essay 2




Polygamy has been practiced in our world throughout most of history. Our society today seems fascinated by the idea of polygamy. We have romanticized the idea through televisions shows like HBO’s “Big Love” and TLC’s “Sister Wives,” even though according to LegalMatch.com’s Managing editor Ken LaMance, “All 50 U.S. states…have made polygamy illegal.” In Texas, according to the Texas Penal Code, committing bigamy, being married to more than one person, is a second or first degree felony, depending on the age of said partners. If one is under the age of 16 it is a first degree felony. The punishment for a first degree felony in Texas, according to the Penal Code, is “imprisonment…for life or for any term of no more than 99 years or less than 5 years.” The polygamy related TV programs vaguely made references to the illegality of their actions, but little seemed to be done about it. The reason behind this might be that according to LegalMatch.com “Many [polygamists] simply go through the religious rites of marriage without seeking legal recognition for their unions, to avoid prosecution for bigamy.”


The measure of the justness of this law is rather difficult. On the one hand, you might have consenting adults, who for their own reasons want to be involved in a polygamist relationship, and if that is what makes them happy is it not contradictory of the constitution to impede their “pursuit of happiness”? However there is a darker side to this argument, especially taking into account religious groups like the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints, who have on many documented occasions forced underage girls into plural marriages. The law has to be this severe to protect against the abuses that often accompany polygamy; therefore the law is just.


The constitutionality of banning polygamy hasn’t been called into question in many years. According to BillOfRightsInstitute.org, in 1878 a man named George Reynolds was convicted of bigamy in the Utah territory. Reynolds didn’t argue that he had broken the law, but Reynold’s argued that the law violated his first amendment rights given that he was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, which required multiple marriages or he risked eternal damnation. The case was taken to the United States Supreme Court where they ruled, in Reynolds Vs. United States, that laws banning polygamy were constitutional, because religious beliefs do not excuse one from following the law. According to the BillOfRightsInstitute.org, “in 1890, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints officially rejected polygamy.” The rejection of polygamy led to the creation of the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints, who still practice polygamy.


In application, as mentioned before, the law isn’t put into effect very much, since there are ways around these laws by not legally marrying someone. In the case of Kody Brown, the man with 4 wives featured on the TLC show “Sister Wives”, whose polygamy was brought out into the open, on national TV, bigamy charges may not be possible, because he is only legally married to his first wife. The other three marriages are simply “spiritual unions.” It can be argued that since they have all been together for so long, the other marriages are legal, through common law marriages. According to the Huffington Post, the Utah attorney general’s office has commented that “it has been [their] office’s position not to pursue cases of bigamy between consenting adults.”


This law is as practical now as when it was created. Polygamy is still in existence; therefore the law will continue to be relevant and practical until such a time when polygamy no longer exists. However the irrelevance or impracticality of this law does seem to be unlikely, given the population is still practicing polygamy.


In conclusion, a law banning polygamy, such as the Texas law cited, is nothing but just, constitutional, fair, and practical; everything a law should be. This harsh law, though hard to enforce, is a necessary measure to ensure that the seriousness of polygamy is not mistaken.

Rough Draft: Essay 2




Polygamy has been practiced in our world throughout most of history. Our society today seems fascinated by the idea of polygamy. We have romanticized the idea through televisions shows like HBO’s “Big Love” and TLC’s “Sister Wives” even though according to LegalMatch.com’s Managing editor Ken LaMance, “All 50 U.S. states…have made polygamy illegal.” In Texas, according to the Texas Penal Code, committing bigamy, being married to more than one person that is, is a second or first degree felony, depending on the age of said partners, if one is under the age of 16 it is a first degree felony. The punishment for a first degree felony in Texas, according to the Penal Code, is “imprisonment…for life or for any term of no more than 99 years or less than 5 years.” The polygamy related TV programs vaguely made references to the illegality of their actions, but little seemed to be done about it. The reason behind this might be that according to LegalMatch.com “Many [polygamists] simply go through the religious rites of marriage without seeking legal recognition for their unions, to avoid prosecution for bigamy.”


The measure of the justness of this law is rather difficult. On the one hand, you might have consenting adults, who for their own reasons want to be involved in a polygamist relationship, and if that is what makes them happy is it not contradictory of the constitution to impede their “pursuit of happiness”? However there is a darker side to this argument, especially taking into account religious groups like the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints, who have on many documented occasions, forced underage girls into plural marriages. The law has to be this severe to protect those cases where someone is being hurt by polygamy; therefore in my opinion the law is just.


The constitutionality of banning polygamy hasn’t been called into question in many years. According to BillOfRightsInstitute.org, in 1878 a man named George Reynolds was convicted of bigamy in the Utah territory. Reynolds didn’t argue that he had broken the law, but Reynold’s argued that the law violated his first amendment rights, because he was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and further argued that his religion required multiple marriages or he risked eternal damnation. This case was taken to the United States Supreme Court where they ruled, in Reynolds Vs. United States, that laws banning polygamy were constitutional, because religious beliefs do not excuse one from following the law. “In 1890, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints officially rejected polygamy” according to the BillOfRightsInstitute.org, which inevitably lead to the smaller group of Fundamentalist LDS members, who still in many cases practice polygamy.


In application, as mentioned before, it isn’t put into effect very much, since there are ways around these laws by not legally marrying someone. Even in the case of Kody Brown, the man with 4 wives featured on the TLC show “Sister Wives”, he literally brought his polygamy out into the open, literally on national TV. However bigamy charges may not be possible, because he is only legally married to his first wife, while the other marriages are simply “spiritual unions.” Though it can be argued that since they have all been together for so long, the other marriages are legal, through common law marriages. According to the Huffington Post, the Utah attorney general’s office has commented that “it has been [their] office’s position not to pursue cases of bigamy between consenting adults.”


This law is as practical now as when it was created. Polygamy is still in existence; therefore the law will continue to be relevant and practical until such a time when polygamy no longer exists. However this does seem to be unlikely, given the populations still practicing polygamy.


In conclusion, a law banning polygamy, such as the Texas law I cited, is nothing but just, constitutional, fair, and practical, everything a law should be. This harsh law, though hard to enforce is a necessary measure to ensure that the seriousness of the act is not mistaken.

Essay 1 Rewrite


San Angelo, once known as the oasis of dry west Texas is now quickly becoming nothing more than a patch of dry dirt with a few buildings sitting on it. San Angelo has little more than a year’s supply of water left and is currently in Stage 3 drought, the most severe stage the region has ever declared. Stage 3 means that no watering of lawns is permitted, nor is the use of water to fill swimming pools. Recent rains in the area seem to promise a demotion to Stage 2 status; however the problem is nowhere near solved for long. There have been many ideas bandied around on how to fix this dilemma, one of those ideas is already in action, but is it the right idea or merely the cheapest?
The plans for the pipeline to the Hickory Aquifer, which is located about 60 miles away from San Angelo, have been slowing moving along for quite some time. However this plan has sparked much debate for the main reason that many residents feel that the Hickory Aquifer is an unsafe method of gaining the necessary water, while others argue that it is the only practical source.
Those for the project do their best to point out that the alternatives to the Hickory Aquifer are unconventional and unrealistically expensive to finance. For example, the desalination of brackish groundwater, a salty water that has a lower salt concentration than seawater, which is abundant in Texas would likely produce up to 16,050 acre-feet per year of water. This plan has a capital cost of $214 million. Plans for reducing water loss from evaporation, as cities lose more water from their reservoirs to the sun than they do to their residents, have a capital cost $13 million. Water reuse projects which could potentially provide up to 12,490 acre-feet per year of water would cost $131 million. These innovative plans are not funded by the federal government and would require some financing system before they could be adopted.
 Those against the project point out the snag in the Aquifer plan: the water has seven times the Environmental Protection Agency’s approved limit of radiation and the treatment facility, to rid the water of the radiation, will absolutely not be ready by the time the pipeline project is set to be complete, in mid 2013. Therefore, a plan has been made to dilute the radiation by mixing the water into the popular lake, Lake Nasworthy. Nasworthy is not only home to all sorts of recreational water activities, but also a plethora of wildlife, not limited to the native birds, fish, and nutria. This diluted radiation would then be pumped through every source of water, whether it be a residential home or a business, connected to the water line. This plan could have unforeseeable ramifications for every resident exposed to the potentially harmful radiation. However, this is the plan that San Angelo’s leaders have designated for the community, due to the fact that all of the water plans are unfunded by the federal government, leaving Texas grasping at straws that have no safe water attached.
            As it is unlikely that the funding will come through for any other source besides the Hickory Aquifer, it seems the residents of San Angelo Texas will simply, and quite literally, have to suck it up. Without the funding for a better, safer means of obtaining water, San Angelo has little choice but to continue with the plans for the Hickory Aquifer, no matter how detrimental it may prove to be at a later date. The arguments have reached stasis, in that those fighting against the project know that without some serious capital there is no way they can change the outcome of this project, they’ve agreed to disagree. The aquifer offers a solution. That is all. Nowhere did it say that it was a good solution. But then again I suppose beggars can’t be choosers, and San Angelo is begging for water.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

How I Feel in My Classes

Russian Class

Math Class

Political Science Class

Music Appreciation Class


English Class 

Every Class Ever!!!!

Monday, October 1, 2012

Rough Draft: Essay 1


You’ve probably never heard of it, most people haven’t. This West Texas town, San Angelo, “once known as “the oasis” of dry west Texas” now quickly becoming nothing more than a patch of dry dirt with a few buildings sitting on it. But that’s what happens when a city has only a year’s supply of water left. It’s called Stage 3 drought, the most severe stage the region has ever declared, in which “watering of lawns, golf courses and gardens, forbidding of fresh water use for swimming pools, and the closing of commercial car washes” are enforced. And while recent rains in the area seem promising of a demotion to Stage 2 status, the problem is nowhere near solved for long. There have been many ideas bandied around on how to fix this dilemma, one of those ideas is already in action, but it is the right idea or merely the cheapest?
The plans for the pipeline to the Hickory Aquifer, which is located about 60 miles away from San Angelo, have been slowing moving along for quite some time. However this plan has sparked much debate for the main reason that many residents feel that the Hickory Aquifer is an unsafe method of gaining the necessary water, while others argue that it is the only practical source.
Those for the project do their best to point out that the alternatives to the Hickory Aquifer are unconventional and unrealistically expensive to finance. For example the desalination of brackish groundwater, a salty water that has a lower salt concentration than seawater, which is abundant in Texas would likely produce “up to 16,050 acre-feet per year of water” however it has a “capital cost of $214 million.” Another example of alternative methods include: “reducing water loss from evaporation, since cities lose more reservoir water to the sun than to their residents” and “reuse projects”. The evaporation loss prevention plan has a capital cost of only $13 million, where the “reuse projects” which could “provide up to 12,490 acre-feet per year” of water would cost $131 million. The innovative plans are “unfunded, and it recommends that some sustainable financing system for it to be adopted.”
 Those against the project point out the snag in the Aquifer plan: the “radiation in that water is seven times higher than the Environmental Protection Agency’s approved limit”, and the treatment facility, to rid the water of the radiation, will absolutely not be ready by the time the pipeline project, set to be complete in mid 2013. Therefore a plan has been made to dilute the radiation by mixing the water into the popular lake, where there are not only all sorts of recreational water activities happening, but also plenty of wildlife, not limited to the native birds, fish, and nutria. That however isn’t the worst part, this “diluted” radiation would then be pumped into every residential home connected to the water line in the county, subjecting every resident to unknown amounts of potentially harmful radiation. However this is the plan that San Angelo’s leaders have designated for the community, because all of the water plans are unfunded by the federal government, leaving Texas twisting in the wind grasping at straws that have no safe water attached.
            As it is unlikely that the funding will come through for any other source besides the Hickory Aquifer, it seems the residents of San Angelo Texas will simply, and quite literally, suck it up. Without the funding for a better, safer means of obtaining water San Angelo has little choice but to continue with the plans for the Hickory Aquifer, no matter how detrimental it may prove to be at a later date. The arguments have reached stasis, in that those fighting against the project know that without some serious capital there is no way they can change the outcome of this project, they’ve agreed to disagree. The aquifer offers a solution. That is all. Nowhere did it say that it was a good solution. But then again I suppose beggars can’t be choosers, and San Angelo is begging for water.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Serenity


In light of my last two submissions I thought this just might be appropriate. It's not exactly poetry, but the words ring just as true for me.

"God grant me the serenity
to accept the things I cannot change;
courage to change the things I can;
and wisdom to know the difference."

The life of a college freshman seems to me to be absolutely overwhelming, but keeping this in mind, I suppose it should be a little easier. There will be things I cannot change, like the actions of others, there will be things I can change, like my own reactions, all I ask from the universe, whether you believe in God, Allah, Karma, Buddha, or a flying grilled cheese, is the wisdom to remember that there is a difference, some things are out of my control, but there are things that are within my control.

Be A Man!

This is a draft of a Facebook message that I was going to send to my roommate and best friend's now ex-boyfriend. Common sense prevailed and I didn't send it, but it will most likely be cathartic to post it somewhere:
"Let me just say that I am so glad I don't have to deal with you and your childish insecurity anymore. I stood by and supported my friend because she loves you, but thank GOD she has finally seen that you haven't changed! And you probably never will. You are the same possessive insecure jerk you were last time! And HOW DARE YOU call her selfish! Relationships are about give and take and its obvious that your childish mind can only comprehend the fact that, to you, she wasn't giving enough, well neither were you. Like I said I stood by and watched, trying to be supportive, as you two gave this another go, but thank GOD I don't have to watch YOU hurt someone who I love like family. You may have thought that you loved her but you acted like you wanted to own her. Which is ridiculous! Grow up! Man up! I don't care what you do! But grow a pair and stop blaming Cheyenne for everything that went wrong. She said she changed, and she did, this time she didn't need you. You CLAIMED to have changed, but guess what you didn't. You did all this "growing" and "changing" and still you have the gall to blame her for everything. That is bull and you know it!"

Oh the catharsis. 

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Life is Like a Country Album

I thought for my first entry into my commonplace book, I'd make a more personal entry, as to give this a more intimate feel than a school assignment.
Some days my life is all bright and shiny, driving down the road, singing along with the radio about "Gettin' Down on the Farm" with Tim McGraw. Other days, like today, if my life were a movie my soundtrack would be not so happy, not so shiny. More akin to songs like "I'm Over You" by Chris Young, or like "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye" by Luke Bryan, singing vehemently that there isn't "any reason running after something that's already gone."
While musing about this particular topic a song came to mind, a song that has been used in popular culture on more than one occasion. The song rambles on about how glad a man is that he lives in Tennessee because all of his past loves still live in Texas. That's right, "All My Ex's Live in Texas" by the  King himself, George Strait, and after today I am entirely envious of his proximity to said former loves.
However I think I will endeavor to take a page out of a Gary Allen song: "
I'm still learning how to pray
Trying hard not to stray
Try to see things your way
I'm still learning how to pray
I'm still learning how to trust
I'm still learning how to bend
It's all in someone else's hands
There's always been a bigger plan
But I don't need to understand
I'm still learning to bend"
Therefore I like to think of life as a Country Album, there will be some happy songs, some sad songs, some angry as hell songs, and who knows maybe even a love song or two. Well, a girl can hope.