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Enlightened, Season 2

Every week, Jeffrey Bloomer had an IM conversation with a different fan of?Enlightened. This week, he dabs his eyes about the season two (and possibly series) finale with June Thomas, a Slate culture critic.

Jeff: Well, June, we got a birth and a CEO near-death in that final half-hour, and plenty more in between. But first the big question: Is Amy the fool, the goat, the witch?or is she enlightened?

June: Look, if caring about something other than money is dopey, she's a fucking moron. And shockingly?because I rarely felt this in the episodes leading to this one?I do think she is enlightened. It felt to me like the confrontation with Szidon was cathartic. When she walked out of the meeting and managed that glorious "He seemed upset" to the security guard accompanying her, it did seem like a great weight had been lifted from her shoulders.

Jeff: Yes, that line was hilarious, and it was gratifying to see Amy hold her own upstairs, even if she had to be sheepishly dragged up there by the HR toads. (Why did she even bother to try to steal her hard drive?) And it wasn't just in that sequence, either?when Jeff invited her over afterward, she declined. It wasn't looking good for Amy last week, but in the end it turns out she really has seen the light.

More about that sequence in the office: The final moment with Szidon babbling obscenities into the elevator clearly mirrored Amy?s meltdown in the pilot. Is that a cute visual gift to patient viewers, or something more?

June: Well, if Mike White hadn't been campaigning for the show to be renewed, I would've been convinced that he intended this as a series finale. And I would've applauded his amazing ability to draw so many strands together over the course of two seasons. As well as the effective parallel between elevator-door rageathons that you pointed out, her final voice-over contained at least five lines from her post-rehab voice-over in the pilot. It was as if she asked questions in the pilot and then answered them in this episode. Her conclusion?"You can change. And you can be an agent of change??which we heard after seeing Amy and Levi apparently repair their relationship, and while we saw several of the supporting characters acknowledge the ways their lives had been transformed, felt like a really satisfying and uplifting note to end on. Did it seem that way to you?

Jeff: Absolutely.?Enlightened?has often moved forward haltingly, as characters seemed to make strides only to regress, and it was so nice to see it arrive at what felt like a rare moment of closure. When Amy saw the big front page of L.A. Times in those final moments and didn't bother to pick it up, that spoke a tremendous amount about how far she?d come. That said, after watching this episode, I was left with the conflicting sense that I was both satisfied and that I desperately wanted to know what happens next. I'm a little hooked on this thing.

June: So much movement! May I share a pet theory about Enlightened? There's so much driving; Amy always seems to be getting in and out of that dreadful car of hers. For a show that squeezes a lot into 30 minutes, I've always been struck by how many of those minutes are spent watching people sitting in their cars, usually alone. Sure, it's a Southern California show, so that makes sense. But I think it's also making a point about the path to enlightenment. It's not always as direct as a five-lane L.A. highway. In fact, I've noticed that breakthroughs often happen when Amy gets out of her car.

In Season 1, she and Levi went rafting, and she had a moment of clarity. Her mom wouldn't let Amy use her car, so she rode to work on the bus, and she had an epiphany. This season, Tyler drove her to her game-changing meeting with Jeff, and then when Levi returned, they took that heartbreaking walk to the old ball field. Those were all essential steps, but in this episode, she seemed to find closure?or at least a sense of oneness?with Levi. And when she got to his house after that astonishing scene at Abaddonn, she told him, "I was driving, and I have nowhere to go." She has arrived. At enlightenment? Maybe!

Jeff: That's clever! I hadn't made the connection between those scenes, but it does seem like geographical spaces are important: that long drive between L.A. and Riverside, the Abaddonn labyrinth. And given how dense this show is with metaphor, physical distance would seem to be an apt reflection of Amy's personal travels.

June: It's interesting that you call Abaddonn a labyrinth. It feels like a beehive to me?the bridges they take from the office towers to the parking lot feel like the spokes of a honeycomb cell. (And poor Eileen had to work under the gaze of a corporate film that showed bees at work.)

Jeff: Ah, yes, a beehive?I once tried to sketch Abaddonn?s grounds and came up with an incoherent maze of lines, but your reading feels right. As for Amy?s enlightenment, you could cast her return to Levi at the end as an old-Amy mistake?was he kidding when he offered her a beer??but she seems to have come in peace. Her larger question of "Who am I?" seems to remain open, though. I'm still not sure she knows.

June: Yes, Amy still has a lot more exploring to do. And like you I want to be present for her travels. I'm very conflicted about her return to Levi. In some ways the whole show has felt like a very smart meditation on middle age, specifically midlife mediocrity. Amy and Levi are both old enough to feel that avenues are closing to them?I don't really believe his assurance that they could still have a baby. At the same time, their lives are far from over. There's still hope (another word that came up a lot this episode). Amy can never stop wondering if Levi is The One. On one level, she knows she has to make a decision, really leave him for good or go back to him. But I think one of the realizations she had at the end was that there's still time to keep pondering all these questions.

Jeff: That?s true?that wasn't a real reconciliation, exactly, just a gesture that there was something unfinished there. (I too doubt a kid is a wise or plausible choice for them.) As for the future, as Amy tellingly puts it when she talks to Jeff for the final time: "We'll see."

In last week's chat, we said we'd call this finale a success if we saw Helen smile. And much to my slightly crazed glee at the end, she did! She saw the Times headline, and she was finally proud of Amy?and maybe even understood her?

June: Yes! This is one of the most blub-inducing shows on television, and Helen's grin of pride in the final montage was the oddest tearjerker of them all. At the beginning of the episode, when Amy told her mother that she had set a newspaper expos? of Abaddonn in motion, I was surprised by how sympathetic I was to Helen's response: "Why is that your business?" Amy was effectively homeless, $20,000 in debt, driving a shit car?why was she stirring up trouble? When Helen saw the headline, she seemed to know the answer to her earlier question. And so did we!

Jeff: We don't need to blow the whistle on Helen (or you, June) after all. And if she can understand Amy, anyone can?maybe even Amy herself. Until next year?

June: I hope so. There is only one life, and I want this TV show in it.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=654bd65d9ddd3f3b0b095cb719b999ff

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Construction spending mixed in January

Total residential construction in January was down 0.02 percent from December. Single family construction climbed 3.62 percent in January, but non-residential spending dropped 5.08 percent during that period.?

By SoldAtTheTop,?Guest blogger / March 1, 2013

This chart shows, in millions, the total value of residential construction put in place between 2004 and the beginning of 2013. Total residential construction slid slightly in January, dropping 0.02 percent from December 2012.

SoldAtTheTop

Enlarge

Today, the U.S. Census Bureau released their?latest read of construction spending showing mixed results in January with total construction spending and non-residential construction spending declining while single family residential construction spending improved. ?

Skip to next paragraph SoldAtTheTop

Writer, The PaperEconomy Blog

'SoldAtTheTop' is not a pessimist by nature but a true skeptic and realist who prefers solid and sustained evidence of fundamental economic recovery to 'Goldilocks,' 'Green Shoots,' 'Mustard Seeds,' and wholesale speculation.

Recent posts

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On a month-to-month basis, total residential spending declined 0.02% from December climbing 22.05% above the level seen in January 2012 while still remaining a whopping 54.97% below the peak level seen in 2006.

Single family construction spending climbed a notable 3.62% since December rising 30.21% since?Janaury 2012 but remained a whopping 68.00% below it's peak in 2006.

Non-residential construction spending declined a whopping 5.08% since December but still?climbing?3.95% above the level seen in January 2012 and remained a whopping 27.36% below the peak level reached in October 2008.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on paper-money.blogspot.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/4TAlHljcUPo/Construction-spending-mixed-in-January

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U.N. Security Council sets stage for lifting Somalia arms embargo

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council is considering lifting an arms embargo on Somalia's government for one year so it can beef up its army to combat Islamist fighters, according to a draft resolution that is due to be voted on by the divided council on Wednesday.

The Somalia government has asked for the arms embargo to be lifted and the United States has been pushing the council to agree, but Britain and France have been wary of removing the ban in a country already awash with weapons, diplomats say.

The draft resolution, drawn up by Britain and obtained by Reuters, appears to propose a compromise: lifting the arms embargo for one year but keeping restrictions in place on heavy weapons such as surface to air missiles, howitzers and cannons.

The draft resolution says the arms embargo shall not apply to the deliveries of other "weapons or military equipment or the provision of advice, assistance or training, intended solely for the development of the security forces of the federal government of Somalia and to provide security for the Somali people."

It says that these weapons and equipment "may not be resold to, transferred to, or made available for use by, any individual or entity not in the service of the security forces of the federal government of Somalia."

The 15-member council imposed the arms embargo in 1992 to cut the flow of arms to feuding warlords, who a year earlier ousted dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and plunged Somalia into civil war. Somalia held its first national vote since 1991 last year to elect a president and prime minister.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon earlier this month suggested the Security Council consider lifting the arms embargo to help rebuild Somalia's forces and consolidate military gains against al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab militants.

But some council members are concerned about the security risks involved with removing the arms embargo and one council diplomats said the proposed move "sends shivers down the spine."

MILITANT INFILTRATION

The Security Council's Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea, an independent panel that reports on compliance with U.N. sanctions, have warned that the Islamist militants in Somalia are receiving weapons from distribution networks linked to Yemen and Iran, diplomats have told Reuters.

A U.N. diplomat also said the U.N. monitors had reported that some al Shabaab militants had infiltrated units of the Somali security forces.

The council is scheduled to vote on the draft resolution on Wednesday before the mandate of the 17,600-strong AU peacekeeping force, known as AMISOM, expires on Thursday. The resolution would renew AU peacekeeping force for one year and reconfigure the U.N. mission in the Horn of Africa country.

AU troops from Uganda, Burundi, Kenya and Ethiopia are battling al Shabaab militants on several fronts in Somalia and have forced them to abandon significant territory in southern and central areas of the country.

The militants, who affiliated themselves with al Qaeda in February last year, launched their campaign against the government in early 2007, seeking to impose sharia, or strict Islamic law, on the entire country.

The Somali government believes lifting the embargo will help it strengthen its poorly equipped, ill-disciplined military - more a group of rival militias than a cohesive fighting force loyal to a single president.

The draft resolution requires that the Somalia government or the country delivering assistance notify the Security Council "at least five days in advance of any deliveries of weapons and military equipment ... providing details of such deliveries and assistance and the specific place of delivery in Somalia."

It also asks the government to report regularly on the structure of the security forces and the infrastructure and procedures in place to ensure safe storage, maintenance and distribution of military equipment.

The removal of the arms embargo would be reviewed in one year, according to the draft resolution.

(Editing by Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-n-security-council-sets-stage-lifting-somalia-174110022.html

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Kerry says US releasing millions in aid to Egypt

CAIRO (AP) ? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry says the Obama administration is rewarding the Egyptian government with financial aid because of Cairo's promises of economic and political reforms.

Kerry says the U.S. is providing $190 million immediately as part of a larger pledge of $450 million over time.

Kerry says the money reflects Egypt's "extreme needs" and President Mohammed Morsi's commitment to satisfying conditions to close a $4.8 billion package of International Monetary Fund loans.

Kerry also says that a separate $60 million is for a new fund to provide direct support to Egyptian entrepreneurs and young people.

The announcement of the aid came after Kerry's meeting Sunday with Morsi.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kerry-says-us-releasing-millions-aid-egypt-161105370.html

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Green Blog: Some Far Out (at Least for Now) Energy Ideas

The just-concluded annual meeting of ARPA-E, an agency founded to nurture interesting energy ideas that may or may not work, featured an exhibition hall with scores of displays staffed by hopeful entrepreneurs.

Many of them seemed to be Ph.D. engineers; in some cases, you needed a Ph.D. yourself to understand what was being presented. But here are three simpler ones that seemed enticing, even if their practicality has yet to be demonstrated.

Some bacteria and algae turn sunlight into oils that can be burned in a car engine or used as raw material at a refinery in place of crude oil. Yet production of reasonable quantities at a reasonable cost has so far been elusive. Tobacco, meanwhile, is easy to grow but has no healthy use. Can the two be merged?

The research consortium Folium (from the Latin word for leaf), which includes the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Kentucky, has taken genes from those types of bacteria and algae and inserted them into tobacco plants. In the first year of work, it produced a crop and then used organic solvents to extract the oils out of the leaves. (Check out the video above.)

Further work on the project, which received $4.8 million from ARPA-E, will determine whether the oils can be used directly as fuel or must go to a refinery. But the tobacco is already yielding one product that could substitute for diesel oil, said Peggy G. Lemaux, a researcher at Berkeley.

Making these oils from tobacco, as opposed to some other crops, would not interfere with food production, Dr. Lemaux noted. And tobacco is already in surplus because of the decline of the cigarette market, so a large infrastructure is already in place, she said.

Researchers have modified the plants so that they have less chlorophyll, the chemical that converts sunlight into stored energy. Normally, chlorophyll is helpful in photosynthesis and makes leaves dark enough that the area beneath them is in shadow, killing off competing species. But ?that doesn?t make sense in a monoculture,?? Dr. Lemaux said, so the chlorophyll is reduced. With less chlorophyll, light not absorbed by the top layer of leaves can penetrate down to lower levels.

Among the challenges, however, is raising the amount of oil produced per pound of tobacco.

In another project, Proton OnSite received $4.6 million to work on using electric current to break up water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen.

One of the problems with integrating renewable energy into the electric system is that wind and sun are intermittent, creating challenges for grid operators who need to provide a constant supply of electricity. Proton came up with a product that is the direct opposite of a fuel cell, which converts hydrogen to electric current and water. The oxygen and hydrogen atoms are instead split up in a chemical reaction, and the hydrogen can either be turned back into electricity in a fuel cell or used for industrial purposes.

Proton is currently is working with the town of Hilo in Hawaii on an installation that would make hydrogen for a bus powered by a fuel cell. But the Proton equipment would also be connected to the local grid: upon receiving a signal, it would pull more current from the grid, or less, to keep supply and demand exactly balanced.

The system could store energy produced by the wind and sun when the electricity wasn?t needed, and balance the system on a moment-to-moment basis.

At another booth, a company called Otherlab was showing off a concept for a different kind of vehicle tank to hold natural gas. Today?s tanks for compressed gases are almost always spheres or cylinders, a geometry that affords maximum space. But it can be hard to find space for a cylinder or a sphere on a car, where every inch of space is usually spoken for by some mechanical system.

So Otherlab, which received $250,000 from ARPA-E, proposes a ?conformable tank,? meaning a coiled pipe that would store gas in a flat area. The company had an eye-catching display of a coiled tube storing an example of a large volume of material: the human gastrointestinal tract.

Source: http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/01/some-far-out-at-least-for-now-energy-ideas/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Obama signs order for "sequester" budget cuts (reuters)

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Diverse coral reef yields many new species

Jim Thomas

A new species of nudibranch discovered in Madang Lagoon, Papua New Guinea.

By Becky Oskin
LiveScience

A vast array of new species was recently discovered in the world's most spectacular reef you've never heard of -- Madang Lagoon in Papua New Guinea.

"It is the most diverse reef in the world," said marine biologist Jim Thomas, a researcher at Nova Southeastern University's National Coral Reef Institute in Hollywood, Fla.

Madang Lagoon is also one of the world's most threatened coral reefs, Thomas added, imperiled by nearby industry. A World Bank-sponsored tuna cannery opened recently, drawing tiger sharks attracted to offal dumped offshore. Another 10 canneries are planned, Thomas said. Along the Ramu River, which drains into the lagoon, a massive nickel mine just started operation. The mining company dumps its sludge a mile offshore, but Thomas is concerned the sediment could contaminate the lagoon.

"It's getting ready to be severely impacted," Thomas told OurAmazingPlanet.

Jim Thomas

A new amphipod species from Madang Lagoon. The tiny, shrimp-like creature lives inside a clam.

An international team surveyed Madang Lagoon's coral reefs in December 2012, to document changes since the last survey 20 years ago and provide a baseline for any changes due to development. Biologist Philippe Bouchet of the Natural History Museum in Paris led a lagoonwide survey, while Thomas and his colleagues returned to the site of their expedition in the 1990s.

The good news is that despite the ensuing development, the reef is as diverse as it was 20 years ago, Thomas said. In fact, both teams found new marine creatures.

Because they revisited the same sites, Thomas' team, which searched for invertebrates, knew right off they had discovered new species, he said. These include amphipods, tiny shrimplike creatures that live inside sponges and clams, and fernlike crinoids, which grip the coral. A new pink nudibranch, a snail without a shell, was also found. The French group also documented a wide array of new species, which await publication in scientific journals.

Though the invertebrates monitored at Madang Lagoon aren't as photogenic as flashy fish, the species are important indicators of reef health and biodiversity, Thomas said. "When an impact hits a reef, these species are the first to disappear, while coral may take five, 10, 15 years," he explained. "Most of the time, when something bad happens, by the time it hits the coral it's too late."

Jim Thomas

This new crinoid species was discovered in Madang Lagoon.

Thomas thinks Madang Lagoon acquired its species diversitythough its unusual geologic setting. The lagoon sits on the northern coast of Papua New Guinea, an island roughly the size of California, where two of Earth's tectonic plates collide. As the Pacific plate slammed volcanic islands into Papua New Guinea over the millennia, species hitching a ride added to the diversity.

The researchers hope local clans that own the lagoon will use the species survey to protect the reef against the effects of development. "These multinational companies can overwhelm landowners, and they really have no recourse," Thomas said.

Reach Becky Oskin at boskin@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @beckyoskin. Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter?@OAPlanet. We're also on?Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/01/17150891-diverse-coral-reef-yields-many-new-species-despite-threat-of-silver-mine?lite

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