Eco-Friendly, Ethanol, Greenpeace and the Republicans
Written on January 14, 2008 – 7:47 pm | by jaygaulardcom |
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Everything You Know about Eco-Friendly Cars is Wrong
Setting the Record Straight on Hybrids, Electric Vehicles and the Smart
$1 per Gallon Cellulosic Ethanol from Waste!
General Motors and Vinod Kohsla have invested in a new company promising to produce ethanol from any organic substance (grass, newsaper, tires, agricultural wastes) for as little as one dollar per gallon.
Breaking News: Greenpeace win battle against Japanese fleet
Greenpeace activists are claiming that they have managed to chase the Japanese whaling fleet from its hunting grounds in the Southern Sea (for now)…
Even Republicans Agree Rush Limbaugh Is Obsolete
Particularly when it comes to his head-in-the-sand stance on global warming, Rush Limbaugh is part of an old, tired machine that even conservatives are growing tired of.
Physicists are confounded about how time actually fits into the universe. One theory is that “time may be an approximate concept that emerges at large scales—a bit like the concept of ‘surface of the water,’ which makes sense macroscopically but which loses a precise sense at the level of the atoms.”
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Tags: Automotive, Cars, ethanol, greenpeace, republicans, rush limbaugh, time

One Response to “Eco-Friendly, Ethanol, Greenpeace and the Republicans”
By Stevie Boy on Jan 14, 2008 | Reply
The faster you go the slower time gets for you, because of the fact that time is elastic and relative, not constant. “Time is not absolutely defined,” said Einstein in his theory of special relativity. He tried to explain how time and space are connected and that this space-time could be stretched and shrunk. The method for stretching and shrinking time is very simple - all you have to do is move very fast. This theory, called the time dilation factor theory, has been tested many times. One example of a test took place in 1971 when two physicists took very accurate atomic clocks and put them in airplanes, which they then flew around the world. They then compared the readings on the clocks in the planes to an identical clock on the ground. The results were unmistakable; the clocks in the planes were 59 nanoseconds slower. This was exactly the difference in time Einstein had predicted in his time dilation factor theory.