It seems like we might go into a depression... if only that had happened before and we could draw on those experiences instead of dithering and arguing while people can't pay their bills.
Dare to dream, am I right?
> The Public Works Administration program and housing was primarily designed to provide housing to white middle-class/lower-middle class families. The progressive aspect of it was that some projects were built for African-Americans as well. But it was explicitly segregated. And in many cases, it segregated neighborhoods that had never known segregation before. So this went on throughout the country. Of the...
> ROTHSTEIN: The second major one was the Federal Housing Administration, which was established in 1934, the year after the Public Works Administration. And the Federal Housing Administration is well known today by many people as an agency that would not insure mortgages for African-Americans. It redlined communities. That was a minor part of what the federal government - what the FHA did in order to segregate metropolitan areas.
Basically every problem we used to be able to throw manpower at now has similar automation and the same sorts of projects would now be done by far fewer people. Any modern new deal would have to look very different to the old one.
But what about Infrastructure Week?
* https://www.npr.org/2018/05/15/611389675/why-its-infrastruct...
* https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/23/politics/donald-trump-infrast...
* https://theweek.com/articles/839005/all-infrastructure-weeks...
/s
> There doesn't seem to be a lack of money but it never seem to do anything useful.
Well, at the federal level, there are two chambers of Congress and the Executive. Given that there's an election coming up in November, you may wish to do vote for the folks that you best think will change the situation.
Changing anything for the benefit of the masses through electoral politics may never happen again or will be too slow. The last time two times the US had aligned executive and legislative branches were the first two years of the Obama and Trump regimes. So much changes between elections that there's no way we can fix it through electoral politics, and we must find another way.
We cannot vote our way out of the immediacy of a pandemic or a constitutional crisis or an environmental disaster. Voting is just too slow help the masses.
We’ve had multiple trillion dollars worth of infrastructure repairs we need to do and nearly sub-zero borrowing rates for the last decade, but the GOP has effectively blocked any efforts to enact any kind of actual fiscal policy. If any business out there’s leadership refused to take sub-zero rate loans to perform critical maintenance on their capital stock, they’d rightly be fired and probably sued.
https://thesource.metro.net/2020/06/15/metro-completes-decki...
Given the need to institute social distancing, this is the only thing which is keeping hundreds of thousands of small businesses alive. Without the PPP, and other loans to large businesses, we would be seeing tens of millions of permanent job losses.
Much of this money was not spent, it was loaned. And without it the lasting economic effects would have been catastrophic.
I too would like to see additional spending on infrastructure, and I think we can afford it, but I find myself frustrated to see it framed as bailout vs. infrastructure. These financial lifelines are meant to keep our economy treading water while we necessarily social distance. They're not to save corporations from excessive speculation.
Really unclear what value investor-owned utilities provide us - the municipal utilities in general seem way better.
Are these upgrades even in the planning phase? People will be hesitant to migrate away from fossil fuels if they can't trust the alternative.
Supply authorities in my corner of the world (Australia) are planning this shift, but I can’t speak to the situation in other regions.
https://arena.gov.au/assets/2020/06/future-grid-for-distribu...
I'm sure there are plenty of plans: the question is whether the general public is willing to deal with the cost.
PG&E (allegedly) delays upgrades:
* https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2019-07-31/pge-rebuts...
But this was supposedly allowed by (elected) regulators because they didn't want blowback from the electorate about larger bills:
* https://www.wsj.com/articles/pg-e-caused-over-400-fires-in-2...
In a different timeline we would have programs for zero interest loans for solar power installations with payments managed through the power company (trading paying for power to paying for the loan to generate the power).
Outages are at least planned and last about 2 and half hours every day for each area so we learned to cope plan our lives around it.
Solar power hot water/gas cooking appliance/DC battery backup system for the Fibre OTN box and Wireless router and wireless AP and I can continue to work.
Others are designed with an automatic shunt that will still allow you to draw power as long as you are generating it.
And some require you to manually flip a switch.
If you're concerned about this, don't charge your Tesla before 10pm.
It would be neat if the utilities had the ability to selectively shed car chargers, clothes dryers, and suchlike loads. I imagine they have to make the choice at a much more coarse level, like at a distribution substation.
Peak daytime demands in urban cores, offices, and factories is different from peak demands in residential exurbs, purely on distribution, even if quantity is comparable.
CAISO declared insufficient operating reserve (the generation capacity that is available to quickly ramp up or down to match load and generation), which forced them to drop load to get back within safe operating margins. It's better to do this than let the system get into an insecure state where a forced outage may cause cascading failures.
---------------------------------------------------------------- NOTICE: 202002424 POSTED: 2020-08-14 18:38:00 ---------------------------------------------------------------- CAISO Grid STAGE 3 System Emergency Notice [202002424]
The California ISO hereby issues a CAISO Grid Stage 3 System Emergency Notice effective 08/14/2020 at 18:36 through 08/14/2020 at 23:59.
Reason: California ISO is Reserve Deficient.
Refer to the ISO System Emergency Fact Sheet (http://www.caiso.com/Documents/SystemAlertsWarningsandEmerge...) for additional detail.
The ISO requires load curtailments, use of Interruptible Loads* and requests Out-of-Market (OOM) and Emergency Energy from all available sources. Maximum conservation efforts are requested.
Spinning Reserves have depleted or are forecast to deplete to levels below minimum requirements. Load curtailments are required and will continue until such time as sufficient Spinning Reserves are available.
Monitor system conditions on Today's Outlook (http://www.caiso.com/TodaysOutlook/Pages/default.aspx) and check with local electric utilities for additional information.
If our current problem is higher daytime residential demand, maybe power companies can stop fighting residential solar initiatives now?
I know that nobody turned off the one in our office when we were away from it for 6 weeks during the NZ lockdown.
It’s not remotely managed and we are not allowed to touch it so someone from the company that owns the building would have had to go and do that, and then come back later to turn it on again. And maybe some of the other businesses in the building are essential and have workers? No idea.
Probably was never going to happen.
even if they're on, there'll be much less for them to do. fewer people opening doors, fewer bodies producing heat, less non-HVAC electrical demand (much of which ends up as heat).
How long have you lived in the Bay Area? I just checked the forecast, and it's not Pacifica your talking about (thank goodness, that would be really awful). Inland from the ocean such heat waves do occur.
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/23/pge-rebuked-over-imposing-bl...
Your Tesla Powerwall can probably keep your AC running for a couple of hours, but it costs $7,600. We're better off using economies of scale to our advantage.
https://www.solarpowerworldonline.com/2020/07/enphase-begins...
The power grid must not only have sufficient generation capacity to match load, it needs some extra - called spinning or operating reserve. This ensures security - the characteristic where the grid is resilient to any single failure. Because load is not normally controlled (i.e. people can turn loads on and off without permission from the system operator), the system needs to be able to respond to that as well as contingencies like a line or generator trip.
Imagine, for instance, that you're fully maxed out on generation with no reserve, and one generator trips offline. You will now need to trigger emergency load shedding very, very rapidly (within seconds) to arrest frequency decline and a cascading, wide-area outage.
So you carry a margin of operating or spinning reserve, essentially generation that is available to very quickly ramp its output up or down in response to system conditions. When that margin starts to get eaten away by lack of capacity, you can do controlled load shedding, where you remove loads that have been already marked as low-priority to get some of your margin back. By doing this, you can avoid uncontrolled load shedding, which would have worse consequences.
Official notice from CAISO:
---------------------------------------------------------------- NOTICE: 202002424 POSTED: 2020-08-14 18:38:00 ---------------------------------------------------------------- CAISO Grid STAGE 3 System Emergency Notice [202002424]
The California ISO hereby issues a CAISO Grid Stage 3 System Emergency Notice effective 08/14/2020 at 18:36 through 08/14/2020 at 23:59.
Reason: California ISO is Reserve Deficient.
Refer to the ISO System Emergency Fact Sheet (http://www.caiso.com/Documents/SystemAlertsWarningsandEmerge...) for additional detail.
The ISO requires load curtailments, use of Interruptible Loads* and requests Out-of-Market (OOM) and Emergency Energy from all available sources. Maximum conservation efforts are requested.
Spinning Reserves have depleted or are forecast to deplete to levels below minimum requirements. Load curtailments are required and will continue until such time as sufficient Spinning Reserves are available.
Monitor system conditions on Today's Outlook (http://www.caiso.com/TodaysOutlook/Pages/default.aspx) and check with local electric utilities for additional information.
http://www.caiso.com/informed/Pages/Notifications/AWENoticeL...
The fact that it has been as robust (in delivery, not hazard) as it has for the last 20 years is a testament to its strength.
I had power outage in LA for ~17 hours last month.
I wonder why I got downvoted.
And corruption is way down from say the early 1900's (don't even talk about the 1800's where it was odd for a politician to not be corrupt).
And your "save the world from fascism" happened at the same time most of the US was segregated.
Not only that, eugenics and Darwanism were popular in the U.S. at the time. Hell, we still forcibly sterilize people in the U.S. to this day.
Americans have been saying this about their own country for decades. Many people see the worst in their own. And if anything I think the outlook was more pessimistic than now in the 80s, and even more than that in the 70s.
Realistically, for all its faults, the US is still where I'd aspire to live for best opportunity and quality of life if I couldn't live in my home country for some reason.
Which is why America is populated by extremes.
Almost everyone here was either kicked out of or lacked consensus with the prevailing, fairly benign version of whatever was practiced where they came from.
Here is how these conversations go:
Someone will make comparisons to the worst countries in the world to rationalize why America is number 1 in a race nobody even entered into. Instead of comparing it to 21st century developed nations. Rinse, repeat.
Follow by:
Could those developed countries have made those advances without the US subsidizing and helping de-risk the cost of their defense? Shrug
Does it makes sense for the US to allocate budget towards said defense while its domestic infrastructure flails? Shrug
Does the structure of the US contribute to this separation of foreign policy and domestic policy? With the broke states responsible for and failing at handling their own affairs, with the well funded Federal Government maintaining consensus by not getting into state affairs, forcing it to use its budget abroad on pet projects? Shrug
Does an actual budget really matter when the world has an infinite demand for dollars meaning that the US really could fund any domestic project and its external hegemony? Shrug
Are those developed countries' taxes really that high in comparison to what everyone in the US pays for anyway? Which country specifically? In many cases where high populations of Americans actually live, no it is very equivalent and Americans get the short end of the stick. Shrug.
Fixed.
"“Approximately two dozen other countries have found H.S.R. feasible, including Uzbekistan,” she said, referring to high-speed rail. “And there is no reason it can’t be done here.”"
The government collects and spends trillions of dollars, and most of that is wealth transfer to contractors, much less value reaches the ground, where much of the country is dotted with emptied out farm towns and improvised shelters. If you don't believe America looks the way some see it, take a cross country train, you go through everybody's back yard that way.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-07-28/californ...
I’m seeing this sentiment expressed more and more, and it seriously concerns me. If you look at the data, almost any data which compares the US to other countries, you’ll see that the US is at or near the top.
This isn’t blind patriotism. Seriously if you are feeling like the US is becoming a “3rd world country” see if you can quantify it in some way. What is deteriorating, and how does that compare to other places in the world?
I have traveled extensively throughout the world and my assessment was based on my personal experience. But...
> If you look at the data, almost any data which compares the US to other countries, you’ll see that the US is at or near the top.
Not so.
The U.S. is a peer to Serbia in infant mortality [1]. It is behind India and Lithuania in terms political freedom and civil liberties (as rated by freedomhouse [2] [3]) and a peer to Chile in terms of economic freedom [4] and government corruption [5]. The U.S. ranks 38th in math and 24th in science education.
And an anecdotal but IMHO significant data point: I have lived in the U.S. for fifty years. I have NEVER had a piece of U.S. mail go missing, until this year, when I have had THREE checks vanish into the cosmic void. (The fact that paper checks are even still a thing here is a testament to how far behind we have fallen.)
---
[1] https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/infant-mo...
[2] https://freedomhouse.org/countries/freedom-world/scores?sort...
[3] https://freedomhouse.org/countries/freedom-world/scores?sort...
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_economic_...
[5] https://tradingeconomics.com/country-list/corruption-rank
[6] https://parentology.com/stem-education-statistics-2019-how-t...
Here is data from top sources referenced in the wiki:
Education: ranked 40 of 72 in mathematics, 25 of 72 in science, 24 of 72 in reading
Health: ranking 42nd among 224 nations
Standard of living: ranked 25 out of 151 countries for 2018
Politics: ranked 45 out of 180 countries
Peace: ranked 121 out of 162 countries
Economics: ranked 17 out of 178 economies
Reference: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_rankings_of_th...
(You might be able to pick slightly better ranking based on your choice of source, but yeah, we are no where near the top. If you filter for developed economies we are near the bottom or have already slipped through the floor)
Source: https://govdata360.worldbank.org/indicators/heb130a3c?countr...
Maybe it's just ignorance then. Quality of life in Northern Europe is far better than it ever was in California, which in retrospect looks like a joke.
also Maternity/Paternity Leave, Paid Sick Time, and Paid Vacation
In many of those areas (incarceration rate, rate of homicides) the US is doing vastly worse than other OECD countries.
Explore the data yourself - https://data.oecd.org/
1 rolling black out every 20 years isn't all that crazy. Would you rather we spend billions/trillions on infrastructure used for 3 days every 20 years?
Do you have some numbers for that? The only load shedding I remember in Europe was done through turning off large consumers and they would typically do this on their side.
Name one?
I've never experienced (or heard) of one in Germany, for example, during my lifetime.
And of course it's not "rolling blackout", but "rolling blackouts", plural.
I don't know, California, how about you start by spending the billions you need to make sure people just baseline don't burn to death, and then we'll see what delivery reliability looks like?
It was mainly Russia who did that. The US effort may well have saved Europe from Communism though.
"Now they say that the allies never helped us, but it can't be denied that the Americans gave us so many goods without which we wouldn't have been able to form our reserves and continue the war," Soviet General Georgy Zhukov said after the end of WWII.
"We didn’t have explosives, gunpowder. We didn’t have anything to charge our rifle cartridges with. The Americans really saved us with their gunpowder and explosives. And how much sheet steel they gave us! How could we have produced our tanks without American steel? But now they make it seem as if we had an abundance of all that. Without American trucks we wouldn’t have had anything to pull our artillery with."
https://www.rbth.com/defence/2016/03/14/lend-lease-how-ameri...
Now who will save the world from the lawless international corporatist panopticon birthed from America? Aliens?
History seems like "she swallowed a spider to eat the fly..."
The US is decentralized (especially as it relates to electricity). Most of the rest of the Union is doing just fine.
It has been great to see the support in recent months for equality among all races in the US. But I wish we would also see more explicit support for Native Americans, for their suffering and their genocide. They are a group that has been exploited, victimized, and stolen from as much as any other group in America.
Every country has their problems, but years of neglect and backwards thinking on social, civic, and cultural “brick work” has led to this.
The civil rights movement was never carried through. The Cold War mentality of military spending on the ever present “boggieman” wasted tens of trillions of dollars of GDP. The vilification of taxes, civic and social programs while also the decades long trend of funneling money to the top. The dirty politics of special interests, limited access, lobbying and un-checked money in politics. The widening wealth gap in both fiscal and quality of living. The gutting and simplification of the educational system to focus on math and sciences instead of raising well-rounded emotionally intelligent young humans. The belief that shoehorning everyone into a college education and the crippling debt that comes with it. The complete lack of national infrastructural investment since the 1950s.
All of this leads to disillusionment. Especially when generations have grown up being fed this believe of “not in america”. Disillusionment leads to desperation, leads to anger, and hate, and scapegoating, to fake “christian” mega churches were people are scamed out of not only their money but the last tatters of their divinity.
Technology like the internet mixed with stunted critical thinking skills, emotional intelligence, and compassion form into a deadly cocktail that breeds and spreads conspiracy theories and delusions fed to us by our enemies directly into our living rooms, on cable television, on our computers, and into our cellphones. Very little of it vetted or touched by anyone. To be shared and re-shared on Facebook in fear to our friends.
And all of this wasted human potential at the cost of the only thing we all share. The Earth.
Donald Trump isn’t the problem. He’s a symptom.
It's hardly conclusive for a "grand decline" narrative, of course, since this is just one anecdote for an entire society.
This terrifying novel describes fragility of our society and its absolute dependence on power grids. Must read in my books
* New Clues Show How Russia’s Grid Hackers Aimed for Physical Destruction
> Russian hackers planted a unique specimen of malware in the network of Ukraine's national grid operator, Ukrenergo. Just before midnight, they used it to open every circuit breaker in a transmission station north of Kyiv. The result was one of the most dramatic attacks in Russia's years-long cyberwar against its western neighbor.
https://www.wired.com/story/russia-ukraine-cyberattack-power...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjingj2473Y
The original is in german, the linked video is the english translation.
It’s easy to rag on California lately but it’s still American’s living there and I feel bad for them.