Texas City Explosion

62 years ago today, a chain of unfortunate circumstances and decisions led to what is still the largest industrial accident in the Unites States.

The Grandcamp exploded at 9:12 a.m. Exploded is probably too mild a word.

The captain and 32 of the Grandcamp‘s crew died; 10 somehow survived. More than 200 people were killed on the quay. The blast was heard 160 miles away. It shattered all the windows in Texas City and half of those in Galveston, 10 miles away.

Some debris reached an altitude of nearly 3 miles before falling back to earth. Two airplanes circling overhead were blown apart by the heavy shrapnel. A one-ton piece of the ship’s propeller shaft landed 2½ miles away. Other pieces sailed 5 miles.

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Pirate Graph

Possibly Mr. Obama’s most important benchmark to-date. (Thanks Germ)

Playing for Change


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Germ gets all the credit for this one – The Playing for Change Project. These guys have traveled the world recording different street musicians and then mixing it together as one track.

Don't Piss Off the Navy

Navy 3, Somali Priates 0 (not counting the several hundred million they’ve pulled in ransom money of course).

Witchhunt

The French really hate Lance for winning their little bike race so many times, but this is getting absurd.

ID

Texas Lawmaker Betty Brown suggested in testimony yesterday, that person’s of Korean and Chinese descent, who often have different names on their drivers licenses than their birth certificates, should just change their legal names to make it easier to vote under the new Voter ID legislation.

“Rather than everyone here having to learn Chinese — I understand it’s a rather difficult language — do you think that it would behoove you and your citizens to adopt a name that we could deal with more readily here?” Brown said.

Brown later told Ko: “Can’t you see that this is something that would make it a lot easier for you and the people who are poll workers if you could adopt a name just for identification purposes that’s easier for Americans to deal with?”

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More on the Texas minority voter suppression, I mean Voter ID here.

Rethinking the Grid

One of the biggest single dollar items in the stimulus package is rethinking the way we deliver energy. According to my uncle, who works on these kind of things, for the most part the electric meter you find on the side of your house is almost identical to the ones you would have found in the late 19th century. He also credits the modern American electric grad as one of the greatest infrastructure achievements of the last century. However, these days the system is in trouble because of (surprise) Congress.

In 1978, Congress began chipping away at the utilities’ dominance by forcing them to buy electricity from independent generation companies that met efficiency goals. Fourteen years later, the government went much further, ordering the utilities to open their transmission lines to all comers.

The result was utter chaos. Many utilities got out of the generation business and morphed into middlemen, shopping for the cheapest power—often from areas with low labor costs and lax environmental oversight—and transporting it hundreds, even thousands, of miles to their customers. This meant using the links between grids, which hadn’t been designed to accommodate such heavy traffic. The grids of distant states thus became closely intertwined, so that an outage in one rural county could affect millions of far-flung customers.

Essentially, no matter how many wind turbines Boone Pickens builds in west Texas, we’re still going to have to figure out a better way to get it to the more populous areas. More about what we can do to modernize the system, including some really interesting power storage technologies like massive fly wheels.