Please see my "Positions" tab for my stance on the military.
https://www.transgenderpulse.com/forums/index.php?/topic/90113-no-way-to-live/#comment-857353. That is what I consider real world politics.
The story of how I more than tripled my income in 2022 is in my book The Log: Gender Transition and Career Revitalization in my 50's - Get it on Kindle
The story of how I switched careers from an art to a science in my 30's without going to school is in my book in || on The Autobiography of Rachel Lydia Rand - Get it on Kindle
My higher hourly wage allowed me to have more time to research and write about politics. Not watching TV and not having a family gave me more time as well.
I'm only proud of this because they probably don't give 850 credit scores to people who don't have good accounting skills. Especially when you are self-employed with an extremely variable income of less than $71,000/year. I paid over $24,000 in taxes for 2014.
"On climate, my stance on moving away from fossil fuels and my leadership on clean air, has earned me the endorsement of every environmental organization that has endorsed in this race. From Sierra Club to Food and Water Watch." - Susheela Jayapal, from our Leauge of Women Voters Candidate Forum at time mark 46:08
I suppose my defense to this is that I haven't asked for any environmental organization's endorsement in this race other than populationbalance.org. I don't spend much time researching these organizations and this is the first time I've heard of Sierra Club and Food and Water Watch. I just read the Food and Water Watch front page. I didn't see any solutions or proposals there. Near the bottom of their home page it says "Work Locally, Make a Difference." That is essentially what I wrote in the voters pamphlet in 2018 here: https://digital.osl.state.or.us/islandora/object/osl%3A252617/datastream/OBJ/view on page 36. Are middle class people working locally or are they planning their next vacation and saving money to buy a long range electric car and level 2 or 3 charging station?
My guess is that climate organizations and people are not supporting me because they are in the business of building things. Human activity causes climate change. It also causes the rat race.
"I believe that my ideas on how to address climate change are correct. Human activity causes climate change. If we are making our economy stronger, we’re likely going to be buying cars and even if they are electric, it takes industrial heat to make cars and all the mining and everything that goes into it. Our topsoil and nitrogen runoff which I mentioned in an interview with Earl Blumenauer in 2018. Earl has been a huge proponent of bicycles and electric max trains in this city and those are going to be vital to our future. The wind turbines and the solar panels are also vital to our future. But I don’t think we are going to be creating a society like we have now for 10 billion people that are projected in uh, by the end of the century. I’m suggesting that generation Z have one child to every two women for the next 40 years. If they do that world-wide, we’ll get our population down to 2 billion by 2099 and I think that is where we need to be to tackle climate change and the inevitable end of oil which we pave our roads with." – Rachel Lydia Rand, from our League of Women Voters Candidate Forum at time mark 50:05
I actually wrote that article in December 2017. As I've said over and over, I'm not against solar power. I'm much more against cars than solar power.
The links in my article don't work anymore. It seems like this is the best link on it now: https://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/Programs/Pages/Solar-Highway.aspx
...and this page for Baldock: https://energyinfo.oregon.gov/blog/2021/9/30/baldock-solar-highway-project-turns-10
I was just informed that Baldock was renamed to French Prairie. The page on it is here: https://www.oregon.gov/odot/Programs/Pages/Solar-FrenchPrairie.aspx
This Durham facility is also one in town which I have personally seen. It's an interesting component of the waste water treatment facility in Tigard: https://cleanwaterservices.org/our-water/treatment-process/durham/
Perhaps my reseach on energy production is out of date. That work was done in 2017 and I've been focusing on reducing demand, which I think is critically important. This is a link to a list of power stations in Oregon: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_power_stations_in_Oregon and here is a list of wind farms in the US with a nice graph: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wind_farms_in_the_United_States.
It's interesting to see the concentration of wind farms in Texas. I also followed the map coordinate links to some solar farms in Oregon. It's interesting to see the communities they are next to and I'm noticing the gray areas on the Google maps.
Can I prove that these facilities exist? No, not right now. Am I interested in visiting them? Just slightly. There are a lot of people in the world. You know, even if these places are the places that will thrive in the future, you can't flock our whole population to those places. We are all kind of stuck where we are, all over the world. Do I fear other countries overrunning us? Slightly.
I hope you are seeing what I am. A changing world. All these places with solar and wind are going to have intermittant power. I'll just stop here and let you ponder that.