Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Problem-Solution Essay: Alternative Energy or Die!

Offshore drilling has affected the environmental greatly in the past year. On April 20, 2010, BP suffered from an oil spill that is still affecting us five months later. Recently, Mariner Energy suffered from an oil spill. Although the Mariner Energy oil spill was not as bad as the BP oil spill, it still will have a lasting effect on the environment. Animals such as, birds, turtles, and mammals have been affected by the oil. Many have died but thanks to volunteers, some animals have been saved. It was a huge shocker when the news got around that two oil rigs exploded in one year. As the humans that watch over the earth put in our hands, why would we take part in even the slightest chance of killing our environment that we must live on and our children’s children must live on for generations? With this situation at hand, I recommend that we work harder to find an alternative energy source that will give humans a safe and efficient way to create energy that can power transportation and produce consumer goods.
            Any way of transportation involves the use of oil that is drilled from the oil rigs, such as the one that exploded. Transportation is not the only thing used by humans that involves oil. Many of our consumer goods are made with the oil that is drilled. Artificial turf, toilet seats, sun glasses, toys, telephones, (eldr.com) and many more items are made using the oil that now affects our environment and kills our animals. It would be impossible for us to just stop using these items. I understand we are human and we cannot just drop everything and forget about it. An alternative energy source could help us design a new way of making these items. Some energy sources have already been found such as; biomass energy, wind energy, solar energy, geothermal energy, and hydroelectric energy (Alternative Energy). All of the above energy sources are renewable which is exactly what the environment needs. Marek Walisiewicz, author, states the types of alternative energy and how it would affect and change the world we live in (Alternative Energy). If we can cut back on the amount of energy we use then we can just recycle and reuse. The same concept of recycling and reusing would be used to produce the consumer goods. Most of the trash that gets thrown out by humans can be recycled into difference consumer goods that are needed. This does sound highly unlikely but if we test different options then we can find one that fits our economy and our way of life. Researchers in China recently found a scheme that would reduce the pollutants by 45-50% and would reduce the wastewater by 32-35% (Li). If American follows in their example and come together with other countries, as the world together we could come up with a way of helping the environment in more of an impact.
            An option many people may bring up is onshore drilling. I say touché for bring up an excellent point. Onshore drilling does prevent oil spills in the water that are much harder to contain. John A. Sullivan wrote an article that shows the demand for onshore drilling rising by stating, “A role in the Davy Jones ultra-deep natural gas well in the Gulf of Mexico and a forecast for a rise in onshore drilling topped Rowan Companies quarterly earnings call this month” (Natural Gas Week). Onshore drilling decreases the affect on animal life if an oil spill does occur. If an onshore oil plant does, however, leak or cause an oil spill then it would be easier to get to the problem and cap it off before it causes great danger to the life around it.
            Onshore drilling may sound like a good idea for containment purposes but if an oil spill does occur, humans would get affected first. The ground would soak up the loose oil and stay there for a while. The ground would be contaminated and we would be unable to use it. Children would have to refrain from playing outside because of toxics that could possibly enter their system and playing in the grass. Gas prices would once again be affected by the oil spill. Christopher Steiner, author of $20 Per Gallon, states that, “You cannot open a newspaper, national or local, that doesn’t feature a prominent story with some angle on gas prices” (1). Many people complain about the increasing gas prices. Which I completely agree but there is a bigger picture to the problem of the oil spills. Humans and animals getting affected and also the major impact the oil will have on our land in a couple of years. Alternative energy could be the solution to the ever growing gas prices and the contamination of the humans and animals.
            Alternative energy may be expensive but switching would positively impact the habitat of animals and humans. Contamination would happen on a smaller scale. Alternative energy also gives people the option to choose what type of source they would like to use and best suits the circumstances. Although alternative energy is a big change for America and even the world, it would greatly impact everything around us even if we do not see the change right away. Producing goods and fueling transportation are two of the most important resources in our nation. Alternative energy gives the world a chance to live longer and allows humans to be safer.  

Work Cited
"Alterative Energy." Alternative Energy - Wind, Solar, Hydro and Other Alt Energy Sources. 2010. Web. 29 Sept. 2010.
Li, Hui, et al. "Cleaner production alternatives for saponin industry by recycling starch." Resources, Conservation & Recycling 54.12 (2010): 1145+. Global Reference on the Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources. Web. 29 Sept. 2010.
"Products Made from Oil | ELDR.com." Celebrate Aging! | ELDR.com. ELDR Media, 2008. Web. 29 Sept. 2010.
Steiner, Christopher. $20 Per Gallon: How the Inevitable Rise in the Price of Gasoline Will Change Our Lives for the Better. New York: Grand Central, 2009. Print.
Sullivan, John A. "Rowan CEO: demand rising for DeepWater, onshore drilling rigs." Natural Gas Week 15 Mar. 2010: 7. Global Reference on the Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources. Web. 29 Sept. 2010.
Walisiewicz, Marek. Alternative Energy. Ed. John Gribbin. New York, NY: DK Pub., 2002. Print. Essential Science.

Riddles

Riddle 1


Bringing a new brighter beginning


Clear the cloud of clumsiness


Picture frame that prances with people


Moving with me as if made as a corner store


Attached at the angle-screw


Fall faster from force with a crack






Riddle 2


Separate by sector-divider


Together with a the totem of a deer


Love flows through the language let out


Patience is pretty trickey


Labor to let it last


Worth all the waiting in the world

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Boast

I am Jessica, queen of the tractor

Country charm because of blood

Goalie master, foot of steel

I’m the rainbow of my family

Pride runs through my perfect veins

Friendly soldiers surround me with mighty swords

Knowledge breaks the walls that hold it

Trouble escapes my fingertips

Stand taller than skyscrapers

Born in the tropics

Later to use a blood-ember to build

Holds hammer in hand

With God’s beacon on my back

Learned well from a worker of wood

Family fills the room

I am by far the best

Stout-hearted to the core

Not easily put down

Ready to defend beliefs

Never to hold a regret


Sunday, September 26, 2010

Journal 10

Many hero stories or poems always get told from the perspective of the hero or someone telling the story about the hero. Not many stories or poems are about the monster that was defeated or their point of view. Gardner took the original hero story to the next level. By telling Grendel’s point of view, the readers learned how he felt about the humans and why he was considered an evil monster. As Grendel told the story of his past to his present, the reader starts to see everything he has learned from the humans, such as his expansion in vocabulary. The reader also sees what caused the confrontation between Hrothgar’s kingdom and Grendel. Seeing Grendel’s status as a monster gives the reader the dark side of what is going on and Grendel also gets to see what is going on in the forest between the kingdoms and the people that others do not see in a hero story.

Journal 9

In the poem “The Seafarer,” the narrator has spent the majority of his life on a ship roaming the sea. The loyalty he has shown has been to his ship. In this case it would be a materialist idol. He refuses to go back to land but later on in the poem you see that he is suffering from being alone and without human interaction. This shows the tragedy of separation that relates this poem to the Anglo-Saxon ideal.

In the poem “The Wife’s Lament,” the narrator’s loyalty is to her husband. Although he is away and his family does not want him to be with her, she still remains loyal and waits for him to return. The poem states, “Grief must always be for him who yearning longs for his beloved.” She longs to be with him and does not worry about anyone else. The tragedies of separation make her grief and suffer from the distance and not being able to be with her husband.

Journal 8

Grendel mocks the Anglo-Saxon literature Beowulf. Grendel is very sarcastic and mocks the fact that Beowulf is based on heroism. Grendel ends up disliking people in general which is the opposite of heroism. Grendel does not try to be a hero except for the couple of times he actually did something good. That was when his perspective on life was different, which is also a major focus in Grendel. Grendel is practically defending himself on how easily Beowulf killed him in Grendel. He states that he slipped on blood which is how Beowulf got the advantage. In Beowulf it just says that Beowulf defeated the evil monster Grendel. Beowulf and Grendel both follow the same themes just in different senses. This is a major reason that Grendel is a parody of Beowulf.

Journal 7

In the poem “Seafarer,” the poet wrote, “And forth in sorrow and fear and pain…/On an ice-cold sea, whirled in sorrow…/ That he feels no fear as the sails unfurl…” In these three lines the words sorrow and fear were both used twice. These would be motifs used to express the emotion within the poet. In the poem “The Wife’s Lament,” the poet wrote, “Under the oak-tree, in this earthy borrow…/Under the oak-tree round this earthy cave…” The poet reuses the image of an oak-tree which could represent a home changing over time because the line changes from earthy borrow to earthy cave. She is waiting all this time for this man and the earth changes every day. “Seafarer” has motifs that more relate to emotions while the motifs in “The Wife’s Lament” are object related to the time period and time changing.