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On June 20, 1979, President Jimmy Carter —sporting a bushy haircut and a wide necktie—invited dignitaries and reporters onto the roof of the White House to watch the installation of thirty-two solar water-heating panels. “A generation from now,” he told them, “this solar heater can either be a curiosity, a museum piece, an example of a road not taken, or it can be just a small part of one of the greatest and most exciting adventures ever undertaken by the American people.” A generation later, one of those panels showed up in a private museum in the offices of an entrepreneur named Huang Ming, in the city of Dezhou, China. In the spring of 2010, I interviewed Ming, who was building a vast fortune by installing pretty much the same solar water heaters across the country. If you’re flying into a Chinese city, look down and you might see one of the devices on every other roof; even back then there were places where ninety-five per cent of homes sported a panel. Ming had built a truly remarkable headquarters—the so-called Sun-Moon Mansion looked like something out of “The Jetsons,” with two sweeping horseshoes of solar panels that resembled the rings of Saturn cut in half. Ming described Carter as a visionary, and shook his head a little ruefully at the path America hadn’t followed. That path—well, it’s truly painful to look back on it now, from the vantage point of an Earth where the poles are melting fast, where Africa may be losing fifteen per cent a year of its G.D.P. per capita because of the effects of warming, and where a senior climate adviser for the current President recently said that we now need “a transformation of the global economy on a size and scale that’s never occurred in human history” to “create a livable future for ourselves and our children.” Jimmy Carter, who was elected in 1976, wasn’t focussed on global warming, though advisers were beginning to warn him about it. Even without the existential impetus of climate change, though, struggling to stay politically afloat during the geopolitical crises that came with the twin oil shocks of the seventies—one caused by OPEC ’s embargo, the other largely by the Iranian Revolution—he sensed how high the stakes really were. The energy crisis, he told Americans early on, using adult language that it’s impossible to imagine an American President using today, was a reminder that “ours is the most wasteful nation on earth.” By 1979, gas-station lines were causing alarm in suburbia, and knocking the edge off his popularity. But, instead of simply drilling more oil wells (America was just a decade removed from the Santa Barbara oil spill and the first Earth Day), he treated the trouble as an opportunity. “All the legislation in the world can’t fix what is wrong with America,” he said. “Too many of us now tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption.” It was time to act on the realization that “owning things and consuming things does not satisfy our longing for meaning . . . that piling up material goods cannot fill the emptiness of lives which have no confidence or purpose.” That world view—the very thing Carter has been lauded for in retrospect, amid images of him building houses for the poor, teaching Sunday school, and holding hands with Rosalynn, his beloved wife of seventy-seven years, in the same modest house in which they lived for decades, until her death, in November—was less popular politically. Not unpopular: with a few weeks to go until the 1980 election, he was still well ahead in the polls, before a late surge from Ronald Reagan ended his political career. But not popular enough: that election was the hinge point in our national political life, when we turned our back on the idea of America as a group project that we’d been pursuing since F.D.R. , and instead embraced the vision that government was the problem, that markets took care of all ills, that our job was to look after our own individual selves. Reagan had no qualms about drilling everywhere: the price of gas dropped, cars turned into S.U.V.s, and we started driving the Earth toward the edge of the cliff. It wasn’t just noble sentiments that Carter offered in the leadup to the 1980 election, however. In fact, in the wake of the oil shocks, his main policy proposal was for solar power. His main domestic-policy adviser, Stuart Eizenstat, told him that “a strong solar message and program will be important in trying to counter the hopelessness which polls are showing the public feels about energy. . . . I’m quite convinced Congress and the American people want a Manhattan-type project on alternative energy development.” Carter agreed and started proposing measures designed to make sure that, by the year 2000, a fifth of the country’s energy would come from solar power. He called for spending a hundred million dollars in fiscal year 1980 to create a solar bank. He asked for additional hundreds of millions to fund solar projects and research, and offered a billion dollars in tax credits to homeowners who wanted to put panels on their roofs or install wind-energy systems. He declared May 3, 1978, to be Sun Day, and delivered a speech (in a driving rain—he was characteristically unlucky) from a federal solar-research facility in Golden, Colorado. “The question is no longer whether solar energy works,” he said. “We know it works. The only question is how to cut costs so that solar power can be used more widely and so that it will set a cap on rising oil prices.” He continued, “Nobody can embargo sunlight. No cartel controls the sun. Its energy will not run out. It will not pollute the air. It will not poison our waters. It’s free from stench and smog. The sun’s power needs only to be collected, stored, and used.” Carter was correct. Had we embarked on an enormous project of solar research then and there, we could have cut the costs of renewable energy far faster than we did. There was no single technological breakthrough that finally lowered the cost of solar power below that of fossil fuel in the past decade, just a long series of iterative improvements that could have come much faster had we worked with the vigor of, say, the Manhattan Project. Instead, Reagan immediately cut the budget for solar research by eighty-five per cent and did away with the tax credit for solar panels, decimating the infant industry. His national-security adviser, Richard Allen, told Reagan about a book denigrating solar energy, whose author had claimed that it was “little more than a continuation of the political wars of a decade ago by other means. . . . Where salvation was once to be gotten from the Revolution, now it will come from everyone’s best friend, that great and simplistic cure of all energy ills, the sun.” The culture war against clean energy had begun. And the solar panels on the White House came down. According to the Washington Post , the founder of the company that installed the panels said that Donald T. Regan, Reagan’s chief of staff, called them a “joke.” They rested for a while in a federal warehouse in Virginia, but most were eventually rescued by a small, environmentally minded school in rural Maine, Unity College, where for many years they supplied hot water to the cafeteria. That’s where I found them in 2010; the college handed over one of them, and with three Unity students and a professor I drove south to Washington, D.C., intending to give it to the Obama Administration. (It was also Unity that gave the panel to Ming; he accepted it on behalf of the Chinese people.) It was a splendid road trip: with the group 350.org (which I co-founded), we held rallies along the way, in Boston, New York, and Baltimore, and at each stop we used gallons of water to show that after three decades the panel still worked fine. Our hope was that, if President Barack Obama put it back on the roof, it would mark a symbolic closing of the circle, and would refire interest in the technology. But it turned out the Administration wasn’t interested—a trio of what the Times Green blog called “midlevel White House officials” met with our delegation in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, and refused to accept the gift. They wouldn’t really explain why, which left the students in tears and me with steam coming unproductively out of my ears. Looking back, though, it’s clear why Obama at that moment did not want much to do with anything so closely associated with Carter. Obama was a deep student of political history, and he knew far better than most how crucial that 1980 election had been; the country had chosen to head in a new direction, and that direction still held, though he was doing all he could to soften its edges and sand its corners. (In 2014, his Administration did, in fact, install solar panels on the White House.) Here’s how he put it a few years later, in perhaps the best summation of the past forty years of our political life: “Through Clinton and even through how I thought about these issueswhen I first came into office, I think there was a residualwillingness to accept the political constraints that we’d inheritedfrom the post-Reagan era—that you had to be careful about being toobold on some of these issues. And probably there was an embrace ofmarket solutions to a whole host of problems that wasn’t entirelyjustified.” Only recently, in the Biden Administration, has a President really tried to shrug off that embrace, and with some success. Joe Biden—who was the first senator to endorse Jimmy Carter in his 1976 run for the White House—tried to throw the weight of the federal government behind clean energy, seeking to get us back to work on that group project of building a working society and a working planet. He’s opened the plants and cut the ribbons that Jimmy Carter might have opened and cut in his second term. That we waited forty years means that our planet will be, at the very least, deeply damaged. But Biden’s effort was by far the greatest tribute anyone could pay to the thirty-ninth President. ♦ New Yorker Favorites The best performances of 2024. A professor claimed to be Native American. Did she know she wasn’t ? Kanye West bought an architectural treasure—then gave it a violent remix . Why so many people are going “ no contact ” with their parents. Ina Garten and the age of abundance . How a homegrown teen gang punctured the image of an upscale community . 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In the world of football, transfer fees can often become the subject of heated debates and speculation. Recently, a shocking turn of events has occurred, as a former millionaire player from Barcelona saw his market value plummet to virtually zero, despite once commanding a hefty price tag of €60 million. This dramatic development has left many fans and experts surprised, while simultaneously igniting discussions about the changing dynamics of the football industry.
Coronation Street star Georgia May Foote pleads to followers for help after major health struggle sees her bedridden for five days Have YOU got a story? Email tips@dailymail.com By RUTH FRANCIS FOR MAILONLINE Published: 18:06 GMT, 29 December 2024 | Updated: 18:11 GMT, 29 December 2024 e-mail 1 View comments Georgia May Foote left fans worried after she revealed she has been battling a painful illness for nearly a week . The former Coronation Street actress, 33, who is best known for playing Katy Armstrong on the ITV soap, took to Instagram to share her symptoms, including severe stomach cramps and an upset stomach. Posting from bed on Saturday night, Georgia wrote: 'Day 5 of having a really bad stomach. 'Tried to eat my first proper meal since Xmas Day and belly said no. Anyone else got this, how do I stop it? The cramps are so painful.' She added: 'Literally out here looking for tips now cz this is getting long' Georgia later appeared on her sofa, wrapped in a grey jumper, telling followers: 'This seems to be my most-ever replied-to story. Everyone keeps talking about this flu going around, but I don't have the flu. I just don't know what this is.' Georgia May Foote has left fans worried after revealing she's been battling a painful illness for nearly a week The former Coronation Street actress, 33, who is best known for playing Katy Armstrong on the ITV soap, took to Instagram to share her symptoms, including severe stomach cramps and an upset stomach With doctors' surgeries shut over the holidays, the soap star turned to fans for advice on easing her discomfort. Georgia also detailed her home remedies, including a hot water bottle and flat coke, while followers recommended other options like peppermint tea and ginger biscuits. She promised to stock up on their suggestions, hoping for relief. A few hours later, Georgia appeared in her car makeup-free to give her fans an update and to show them what she had purchased in the hope of a speedy recovery. She said: 'Yes, I’m very aware I look like death. You asked for an update so thought I’d show you what I got. I spoke a chemist; he said that this is the best thing for me to get. 'I asked about ginger cos I have this every single morning anyway and he said that might be irritating so go for it in something, so I went for these biscuits, hopefully these stay down. 'I’ve gone for gluten free so there’s no chance of it making my tummy hurt. I got some Kefir yoghurt as you all suggested. It’s a bit like Actimel but more yoghurty. 'I got some rice cakes just for something to nibble on, some re hydration drinks, basically the same as dioralyte its just six quid cheaper, some Buscopan as he said this would help and some paracetamol.' This isn't the first time the actress - who starred in Coronation Street from 2010 to 2015 - has shared her health struggles. Georgia appeared on her sofa, wrapped in a grey jumper, telling her followers what she had tried before seeking help from them The actress told her fans how the cramps were so painful and that she hadn't been able to eat a proper meal since Christmas Day After detailing her home remedies, including a hot water bottle and flat coke, followers recommended other options like peppermint tea and ginger biscuits so she promised to stock up on their suggestions, hoping for some relief A few hours later, Georgia appeared in her car makeup-free to give her fans an update and to show them what she had purchased in the hope of a speedy recovery Earlier this year she appeared on This Morning Live where she opened up about her experience with vitiligo, which according to the NHS , is a long term condition that is caused by a lack of melanin, a pigment in the skin. After a holiday to Egypt in May, the Strictly Come Dancing runner up shared a picture of her hands and posted: ' Everytime I go on holiday and I get a beautiful tan, I see how much my vitiligo has spread more than ever before. 'I would be lying if I didn't say it gets to me. It makes me feel super insecure at times. But seeing how the people around me support me and still love me the same makes my heart feel full. 'I've noticed people staring, having a good old nosey with their faces screwed up, and that's when my heart drops. 'So this is just a friendly reminder to those people to be kind. I'm sure the way it makes you feel is nothing in comparison to how the person with it feels.' She added: 'I'm proud to be a voice for people like me with the condition. I battle with how I feel about it every day. Today's one of those days I remember there is nothing I can do about it. So here we are. Showing it in all its glory ( I do have lipstick on, but my whole colour has now gone in and around my lips)' Georgia ended her post: 'And please. Let's be kind' During her time on Corrie, Georgia's character Katy was the youngest daughter of Owen Armstrong (Ian Puleston-Davies) and the sister of Izzy Armstrong (Cherylee Houston). This isn't the first time the actress - who starred in Coronation Street from 2010 to 2015 - has shared her health struggles opening up about her experience with vitiligo, a skin condition After a holiday to Egypt in May, the Strictly Come Dancing runner up shared a picture of her hands and uploaded a lengthy post urging people to be kind Katy's main storylines on Corrie were her relationship with Chesney Brown, being pregnant with and raising their son Joseph Brown, and her affair with Ryan Connor (pictured in 2015) Read More Corrie's Georgia May Foote marries fiancé Kris Evans Her main storylines were her relationship with Chesney Brown (Sam Aston), being pregnant with and raising their son Joseph Brown (originally Lucca-Owen Warwick), and her affair with Ryan Connor (Sol Heras). Though showrunners promised she would not be, Katy was killed off in a car accident in 2017. However, her death was off-screen and she was last seen on Coronation Street in 2015. Meanwhile, Georgia has been married to musician Kris Evans for a little over a year. They celebrated their anniversary on July 15, and Georgia wrote on Instagram: '365 days of Mr and Mrs Evans. In real life, Georgia is married to musician Kris Evans and they celebrated their first anniversary on July 15 'Happy Anniversary to my love! It all started with a [ring] emoji Dm and here we are [laughing emoji]. 'Thank you for choosing me to be your forever person. 'I love how much we are growing every day and I am so proud of everything you do. 'You inspire me to be the best version of myself everyday and support me in everything in my life. 'I love you. Here is to forever.' Coronation Street Sam Aston ITV Share or comment on this article: Coronation Street star Georgia May Foote pleads to followers for help after major health struggle sees her bedridden for five days e-mail Add commentButka scores 18 as Pepperdine takes down UC Davis 85-46
In recent news, there have been reports circulating that a student set fire to a car after failing their driving test, allegedly in retaliation for not passing the second part of the exam. However, the driving school involved has come forward to clarify that the incident was actually a result of an old vehicle experiencing a short circuit and catching fire, rather than an act of vandalism by a disgruntled student.
Maverick McNealy earned his first victory on the PGA Tour as he finished with a final-round 68 to edge out a trio of players by one shot at the RSM Classic in St Simons Island, Georgia. The 29-year-old sank a 5ft 5in putt on the 18th hole to finish at 16-under 266, just ahead of Luke Clanton (66), Nico Echavarria of Colombia (65) and Daniel Berger (67). The victory came in his 134th start as a professional, and it sends him to Maui to start the year at The Sentry and to The Masters in April for the first time. Berger missed a 20-foot birdie attempt on the 18th alongside Echavarria and Clanton, who both missed par putts from inside eight feet on the final hole that created the four-way tie. Clanton was a shot away from joining Nick Dunlap as amateur winners on the PGA Tour this year. He tugged his approach to the 18th into a bunker, blasted out nicely to seven feet and stooped over in disbelief when he missed his par putt and had to settle for a 66. Trending "It's going to be a tough one to definitely take, for sure, after bogeying the last," Clanton said. "But I think it's proven to me that out here I can win, so I'll be training for that." Henrik Norlander, who was No 126 in the FedExCup last year, had a 63-68 weekend and joined Berger as the two players who moved into the top 125. More from Pga Tour Zozo Championship: Nico Echavarria edges out Justin Thomas and Max Greyserman to claim second PGA Tour victory Shriners Children's Open: Taylor Pendrith remains in PGA Tour lead after wind-delays in Las Vegas Shriners Children's Open: Taylor Pendrith takes three-shot lead after 10 birdies as Joel Dahmen suffers penalty Jordan Spieth confirms intention to undergo surgery on injured left wrist after FedExCup playoffs exit Matt Kuchar sorry for solo Monday finish at Wyndham Championship and says he 'knows it stinks' PGA Tour: Hayden Springer shoots historic 59 at John Deere Classic JT Poston posted the round of the day with a seven-under 63, joining Lee Hodges (67) and Canada's Mackenzie Hughes (68) in a tie for fifth at 14-under 268. Get the best prices and book a round at one of 1,700 courses across the UK & Ireland Enter Course, City, or Postal Code Courses Locations No results found. Please try another search. Vince Whaley, who shared the lead with McNealy entering the final round, finished joint-eighth after shooting 71 on Sunday. Michael Thorbjornsen (69) and Patrick Fishburn (69) also tied for eighth at 13-under 269. Sky Sports+ has officially launched and will be integrated into Sky TV , streaming service NOW and the Sky Sports app , giving Sky Sports customers access to over 50 per cent more live sport this year at no extra cost. Find out more here.
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The Nanjing office will serve as a hub for Amazon's operations in China, offering support to both local sellers and international suppliers looking to reach Chinese consumers. By leveraging the city's strategic location and vibrant business environment, Amazon aims to streamline its supply chain and logistics operations to better serve customers in China and other markets.
Reliance Financial Services Wins Technology Innovation Award at Qore NEXUS 2024
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