Ascend, Evolve, Expand.....: Power Outage Traced To Dim Bulb In White House    
 Power Outage Traced To Dim Bulb In White House3 comments
18 Aug 2003 @ 10:17, by Sandi Hunter

Power Outage Traced To Dim Bulb In White House
>
> The tale of the Brits who swiped 800 jobs from New York, carted
> off $90 million, then tonight, turned off our lights
>
> [link]
>
> by Greg Palast
>
> Palast is author of the New York Times bestseller, "The Best
> Democracy Money Can Buy" (Penguin USA) and the worstseller,
> "Democracy and Regulation," a guide to electricity deregulation
> published by the United Nations (with T. MacGregor and J.
> Oppenheim).
>
> I can tell you all about the ne'er-do-wells that put out our
> lights tonight. I came up against these characters -- the Niagara
> Mohawk Power Company -- some years back. You see, before I was a
> journalist, I worked for a living, as an investigator of
> corporate racketeers. In the 1980s, "NiMo" built a nuclear plant,
> Nine Mile Point, a brutally costly piece of hot junk for which
> NiMo and its partner companies charged billions to New York
> State's electricity ratepayers.
>
> To pull off this grand theft by kilowatt, the NiMo-led consortium
> fabricated cost and schedule reports, then performed a Harry
> Potter job on the account books. In 1988, I showed a jury a memo
> from an executive from one partner, Long Island Lighting, giving
> a lesson to a NiMo honcho on how to lie to government regulators.
> The jury ordered LILCO to pay $4.3 billion and, ultimately, put
> them out of business.
>
> And that's why, if you're in the Northeast, you're reading this
> by candlelight tonight. Here's what happened. After LILCO was
> hammered by the law, after government regulators slammed Niagara
> Mohawk and dozens of other book-cooking, document-doctoring
> utility companies all over America with fines and penalties
> totaling in the tens of billions of dollars, the industry leaders
> got together to swear never to break the regulations again. Their
> plan was not to follow the rules, but to ELIMINATE the rules.
> They called it "deregulation."
>
> It was like a committee of bank robbers figuring out how to make
> safecracking legal.
>
> But they dare not launch the scheme in the USA. Rather, in 1990,
> one devious little bunch of operators out of Texas, Houston
> Natural Gas, operating under the alias "Enron," talked an
> over-the-edge free-market fanatic, Britain's Prime Minister
> Margaret Thatcher, into licensing the first completely
> deregulated power plant in the hemisphere.
>
> And so began an economic disease called "regulatory reform" that
> spread faster than SARS. Notably, Enron rewarded Thatcher's
> Energy Minister, one Lord Wakeham, with a bushel of dollar bills
> for 'consulting' services and a seat on Enron's board of
> directors. The English experiment proved the viability of Enron's
> new industrial formula: that the enthusiasm of politicians for
> deregulation was in direct proportion to the payola provided by
> power companies.
>
> The power elite first moved on England because they knew
> Americans wouldn't swallow the deregulation snake oil easily. The
> USA had gotten used to cheap power available at the flick of
> switch. This was the legacy of Franklin Roosevelt who, in 1933,
> caged the man he thought to be the last of the power pirates,
> Samuel Insull. Wall Street wheeler-dealer Insull creator of the
> Power Trust, and six decades before Ken Lay, faked account books
> and ripped off consumers. To frustrate Insull and his ilk, FDR
> gave us the Federal Power Commission and the Public Utilities
> Holding Company Act which told electricity companies where to
> stand and salute. Detailed regulations limited charges to real
> expenditures plus a government-set profit. The laws banned "power
> markets" and required companies to keep the lights on under
> threat of arrest -- no blackout blackmail to hike rates.
>
> Of particular significance as I write here in the dark,
> regulators told utilities exactly how much they had to spend to
> insure the system stayed in repair and the lights stayed on.
> Bureaucrats crawled along the wire and, like me, crawled through
> the account books, to make sure the power execs spent customers'
> money on parts and labor. If they didn't, we'd whack'm over the
> head with our thick rule books. Did we get in the way of these
> businessmen's entrepreneurial spirit? Damn right we did.
>
> Most important, FDR banned political contributions from utility
> companies -- no 'soft' money, no 'hard' money, no money PERIOD.
>
> But then came George the First. In 1992, just prior to his
> departure from the White House, President Bush Senior gave the
> power industry one long deep-through-the-teeth kiss good-bye:
> federal deregulation of electricity. It was a legacy he wanted to
> leave for his son, the gratitude of power companies which ponied
> up $16 million for the Republican campaign of 2000, seven times
> the sum they gave Democrats.
>
> But Poppy Bush's gift of deregulating of wholesale prices set by
> the feds only got the power pirates halfway to the plunder of Joe
> Ratepayer. For the big payday they needed deregulation at the
> state level. There were only two states, California and Texas,
> big enough and Republican enough to put the electricity market
> con into operation.
>
> California fell first. The power companies spent $39 million to
> defeat a 1998 referendum pushed by Ralph Nadar which would have
> blocked the de-reg scam. Another $37 million was spent on
> lobbying and lubricating the campaign coffers of legislators to
> write a lie into law: in the deregulation act's preamble, the
> Legislature promised that deregulation would reduce electricity
> bills by 20%. In fact, when San Diegans in the first California
> city to go "lawless" looked at their bills, the 20% savings
> became a 300% jump in surcharges.
>
> Enron circled California and licked its lips. As the number one
> life-time contributor to the George W. Bush campaign, it was
> confident about the future. With just a half dozen other
> companies it controlled at times 100% of the available power
> capacity needed to keep the Golden State lit. Their motto, "your
> money or your lights." Enron and its comrades played the system
> like a broken ATM machine, yanking out the bills. For example, in
> the shamelessly fixed "auctions" for electricity held by the
> state, Enron bid, in one instance, to supply 500 megawatts of
> electricity over a 15 megawatt line. That's like pouring a gallon
> of gasoline into a thimble -- the lines would burn up if they
> attempted it. Faced with blackout because of Enron's destructive
> bid, the state was willing to pay anything to keep the lights on.
>
> And the state did. According to Dr. Anjali Sheffrin, economist
> with the California state Independent System Operator which
> directed power movements, between May and November 2000, three
> power giants physically or "economically" withheld power from the
> state and concocted enough false bids to cost the California
> customers over $6.2 billion in excess charges.
>
> It took until December 20, 2000, with the lights going out on the
> Golden Gate, for President Bill Clinton, once a deregulation
> booster, to find his lost Democratic soul and impose price caps
> in California and ban Enron from the market.
>
> But the light-bulb buccaneers didn't have to wait long to put
> their hooks back into the treasure chest. Within seventy-two
> hours of moving into the White House, while he was still sweeping
> out the inaugural champagne bottles, George Bush the Second
> reversed Clinton's executive order and put the power pirates back
> in business in California. Enron, Reliant (aka Houston
> Industries), TXU (aka Texas Utilities) and the others who had
> economically snipped California's wires knew they could count on
> Dubya, who as governor of the Lone Star state cut them the
> richest deregulation deal in America.
>
> Meanwhile, the deregulation bug made it to New York where
> Republican Governor George Pataki and his industry-picked utility
> commissioners ripped the lid off electric bills and relieved my
> old friends at Niagara Mohawk of the expensive obligation to
> properly fund the maintenance of the grid system.
>
> And the Pataki-Bush Axis of Weasels permitted something that must
> have former New York governor Roosevelt spinning in his
> wheelchair in Heaven: They allowed a foreign company, the
> notoriously incompetent National Grid of England, to buy up NiMo,
> get rid of 800 workers and pocket most of their wages - producing
> a bonus for NiMo stockholders approaching $90 million.
>
> Is tonight's black-out a surprise? Heck, no, not to us in the
> field who've watched Bush's buddies flick the switches across the
> globe. In Brazil, Houston Industries seized ownership of Rio de
> Janeiro's electric company. The Texans (aided by their
> Frenchpartners) fired workers, raised prices, cut maintenance
> expenditures and, CLICK! the juice went out so often the locals
> now call it, "Rio Dark."
>
> So too the free-market cowboys of Niagara Mohawk raised prices,
> slashed staff, cut maintenance and CLICK! -- New York joins
> Brazil in the Dark Ages.
>
> Californians have found the solution to the deregulation
> disaster: re-call the only governor in the nation with the
> cojones to stand up to the electricity price fixers. And unlike
> Arnold Schwarzenegger, Gov. Gray Davis stood alone against the
> bad guys without using a body double. Davis called Reliant Corp
> of Houston a pack of "pirates" --and now he'll walk the plank for
> daring to stand up to the Texas marauders.
>
> So where's the President? Just before he landed on the deck of
> the Abe Lincoln, the White House was so concerned about our brave
> troops facing the foe that they used the cover of war for a new
> push in Congress for yet more electricity deregulation. This has
> a certain logic: there's no sense defeating Iraq if a hostile
> regime remains in California.
>
> Sitting in the dark, as my laptop battery runs low, I don't know
> if the truth about deregulation will ever see the light --until
> we change the dim bulb in the White House.
>
> -----
>
> See Greg Palast's award-winning reports for BBC Television and
> the Guardian papers of Britain at www.GregPalast.com. Contact
> Palast at his New York office: media@gregpalast.com.
>


[< Back] [Ascend, Evolve, Expand.....]

Category:  

3 comments

20 Aug 2003 @ 14:30 by sharie : What do you think caused it?
I noticed the administration profitted handsomely from the "fines" they imposed on the energy companies.

Thanks for the post.

I especially appreciated the correlation between the "power outage" "dim bulb".  



23 Aug 2003 @ 01:08 by jazzolog : Bush's Blackout Fix
Is everyone clear that the White House remedy for future power outages is the Cheney top secret Energy Plan? Molly Ivins wrote a coherent review of the mess last week...here~~~
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Star-Telegram
Posted on Thu, Aug. 21, 2003

Turn the regulation back on
By Molly Ivins
Creators Syndicate

It's the All-American Blame Game! A Finger-Pointing festival. A perfectly circular firing squad of "Told you so."

Bureaucrats perfecting their CYA moves. Politicians jumping on the opportunity to make points against the other guys. And so's your old man.

U.S. officials quickly blamed a Canadian plant for touching off the blackout mess. Mel Lastman, the clearly sleepless and exhausted mayor of Toronto, replied bitterly: "Tell me, have you ever heard the United States take blame for anything? This is no different."

It would be a refreshing change, would it not, if somebody just stood up and said, "My fault."

The early book has the great power outage of '03 beginning with FirstEnergy of Akron, Ohio.

But there has been no shortage of warnings that the grid was elderly, frail and inadequate, could short out, would short out, should short out at any time.

Those regulatory tigers at FERC (the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission), the guys who stood by doing nothing while California got ripped off for $45 billion, have in fact presciently warned that the Midwestern grid is a mess. So they get lots of points in the "I told you so" category. Not that they did anything about it.

The Clinton administration, in the person of the former energy secretary and now governor of New Mexico, Bill Richardson, is also in the clear, having tried to Do Something back in 1998, to the usual chorus of boos and jeers from the Republican Congress. This naturally did not stop Rep. Tom DeLay, the Exterminator, from blaming it all on the Demo-crats as soon the lights went out.

The Republican theme song is that if only Congress had passed Dick Cheney's perfectly darling National Energy Plan, this would never have happened.

The Cheney plan, hatched in secret with lobbyists from Enron and other players, is about producing more power, not transmitting it safely and reliably, so this may strike some as beside the point.

According to Public Citizen, the Cheney Plan "contains billions of dollars in handouts to nuclear, coal and oil companies, including some of the wealthiest corporations in the world. It would repeal time-honored consumer protection law and the Public Utilities Holding Company Act, and thus advance the destructive path of deregulation and encourage the same type of behavior that gave us Enron and the California energy crisis."

Among the bill's dumbest provisions: It re-authorizes the Price-Anderson Act, which caps the liability of nuclear operators in the event of an accident or attack, thereby making taxpayers liable for nuclear catastrophes (a great example of privatizing profits and socializing risks).

Now here's an interesting joker in the deck. Who do you suppose wanted FERC to expand its jurisdiction to cover all aspects of electricity transmission?

Why, Ken Lay of Enron. For the first two years of this administration, what Ken Lay wanted, Ken Lay got. In his famous memo to Cheney to deter FERC from imposing caps on wholesale power prices, so the California rip-off could continue, Lay also urged that FERC "develop reliability standards and enforce those standards" for the grid.

So guess what? Cheney's plan recommends that FERC "improve the reliability of the interstate transmission system" and "develop legislation providing for enforcement of a self-regulatory organization subject to FERC oversight."

In 2001, Lay had a come-to-Jesus session with Curtis Hebert, then chairman of FERC, saying that if he didn't get on board with Enron's program, he was gone.

So Hebert was replaced by Pat Wood, who came recommended by Lay. So did another FERC appointee, Nora Mead Brownell.

The White House then denied that Lay and Enron had any undue influence over national energy policy, which was certainly a big relief to everybody.

Before we all get lost forever in the finger-pointing, let me point out the fundamental question here. Given that our economy, security and basic services are totally dependent on the electric grid, do we really want to turn our electric system over to those who only seek short-term profits?

As Public Citizen argues, the blackout is "a strong argument against the electricity provisions in the federal energy legislation that would promote the kind of deregulation that brought us the West Coast energy crisis. These flawed policies are destined to worsen the dangers of overly centralized, profit-driven electric generation and distribution systems."

Or to point the finger up into the wind: Do we really have to suffer through another blackout or two before we re-regulate these guys?

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Molly Ivins writes for Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
© 2003 Star Telegram and wire service sources.

[link]  



23 Aug 2003 @ 13:37 by spells : More info....
The North American blackout: deregulation, profit and the decay of the social infrastructure

By Joseph Kay
23 August 2003

Within 24 hours of the resumption of electrical power in New York, Cleveland, Detroit, Toronto and a large swath of the East Coast and Midwest of the US and Canada, the Bush administration was declaring that the cost of securing the electrical grid would be borne by ordinary consumers.

“The people who benefit from the system have to be part of the solution here,” Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham said on a Sunday morning television news program. “That means the rate-payers are going to have to contribute. We think the rates need to be sufficient to incentivize the building of new transmission.” Abraham estimated that the future cost to consumers would be in the tens of billions of dollars.

In announcing that rate increases will be imposed to pay for the upgrade of the electrical transmission system, the administration is repeating a familiar pattern: policies pursued in the interests of an elite section of the population have created a social disaster—this time in form of a blackout that affected 50 million people. But it is ordinary people who will pay for the disaster. Working people and small businesses have already been hit hard by the blackout. Instead of compensation, the government is promising higher costs.

Whatever the immediate causes of last week’s blackout, it has become clear that deregulatory policies pursued over the past decade have undermined the reliability of the nation’s electrical power system. Over 150,000 utility workers have been laid off since 1990, as utility companies cut back on maintenance in the electrical grid that carries energy from power plants to homes and businesses. The transmission system has become fragmented, involving a patchwork of competing private firms and different oversight agencies—some state, some federal, some corporate and voluntary—with disparate standards, various reliability requirements. There exists no rational and integrated control over a resource vital to the daily functioning of the entire population.


Fragmentation and competition in the energy industry

The energy industry today consists of a patchwork of companies with different and competing interests. Even though the electrical grid on the North American continent is now split into two large sections plus Texas, the responsibility for producing, distributing and maintaining energy is distributed among thousands of power companies and utilities. The New York Times reports, “The 6,000 or so power plants, owned by 3,000 utilities, pour power into140 regional ‘control areas,’ which communicate with one another to coordinate moving the electricity as it is bought and sold.”

“We have fragmented and balkanized our electronic power system,” noted John Casazza, who has written a number of books critical of energy deregulation. “No one is taking a look at what is best for the grid and our nation. Instead, you have 1,000 different entities just looking out for themselves and how to make the best profit.”

With the constant pressure on companies to meet the demands of investors for short-term profit, investment in the transmission grid has been cut back sharply in recent years. This is because companies are more focused on keeping their stock values up and their earnings reports on target than on ensuring the reliability of their own electrical systems. Moreover, the greater source of profit lies in deregulated power generation, not in transmission. While power generation and the wholesale energy market have been deregulated, transmission and the sale of electricity to consumers is as yet still partially regulated. This means that companies that own both generating plants and transmission networks are more likely to cut back spending on the latter and invest more in the former.

Moreover, it is often difficult for utilities that own networks to receive permission from local authorities to build new lines or raise consumer rates. “If you can’t raise rates,” noted Rick Bush, editor of Transmission and Distribution World, “the only thing you can do to give money back to shareholders is to cut costs” on transmission line maintenance. He told the Wall Street Journal that investments in new technologies like firewalls and modern switching mechanisms could have helped prevent the spread of the blackout.

Energy demand has grown by 35 percent over the past decade, but investment in the grid has increased by only 18 percent. The total investment of utility companies in transmission infrastructure in the United States is about the same as in the United Kingdom, even though the electrical grid in the US is 15 times as large. “If you adjust for inflation,” noted Clark Gellings, vice president of the industry-funded Electric Power Research Institute, “today we’re making the lowest yearly investment in [transmission] since the Great Depression.”

Adding to these burdens on the transmission grid is the fact that in areas where deregulation has gone ahead, utilities that own transmission lines are required by law to open their grids to other companies, meaning that while the utilities will have to bear the brunt of the cost, the benefit goes to any company that uses the lines. Thus, there is a disincentive to invest.

Concurrent with the breakup of the old regulatory mechanisms, there has been a vast expansion in the amount of energy being pumped through the grid and a major lengthening of the distance through which it passes between buyer and seller. This has placed added strains on the physical capacity of the system, and has also exacerbated the problems associated with the balkanized character of ownership and regulation in the grid.

There is no regulatory authority that has the power to oversee the entire system and enforce standards on utility and power companies. The North American Energy Reliability Council (NERC) is an industry-sponsored group that sets some guidelines, but has no mechanism for enforcement. NERC describes itself as a “voluntary organization, relying on reciprocity, peer pressure and the mutual self-interest of all those involved.” As part of the deregulatory fervor, over the past several years the limited regulatory authority possessed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has been cut back.

All of these factors came into play in the events that led up to the blackout on August 14. The utility that owned four out of the first five lines that failed on that day, FirstEnergy, is one of the largest utility holding companies in the country. It has been responsible for numerous blackouts and other problems related to the decay of its transmission systems and power plants [See: A profile of Ohio-based FirstEnergy: Enron was no aberration].

But the company exists within a broader system characterized by chaos and a lack of rational coordination. For example, energy used in New York may be produced in Canada or by one of FirstEnergy’s plants in Ohio. In order to get to New York, it may pass through not only FirstEnergy’s lines—which are subject to the local authority of three different state commissions, in addition to the FERC—but also the lines of several other utilities. Each of these has its own set of standards on such things as how much reserve power to keep on hand. Communication by the different utilities—by means of a telephone hotline set up after the Northeast blackout of 1965—is often lacking or insufficient.

New York utilities and Canadian authorities have complained that in the hours leading up to the blackout last week, FirstEnergy failed to inform them of the escalating problems that were developing in the Midwest, preventing operators in the East and Canada from putting in place safeguards to stop the problem from spreading.

The fact that the electrical grid in the region is unreliable has been known for some time. Over the past several years, the frequency of transmission bottlenecks and failures has increased, particular in the Lake Erie region that was at the center of last week’s problems. The Industrial Energy Users of Ohio, an industry group, had previously complained of a fivefold increase in such bottlenecks between 1999 and 2000, the first year of major utility deregulation in Ohio.


Deregulation and the crisis of capitalism

The present condition of the electrical system in the United States has its roots in the contradictions of capitalist development over the past several decades.

In the United States, electrical utility regulation has its origins in the first decades of the 20th century and was instituted at a federal level in the 1930s. Utility companies were vertically integrated. They were given a regulated monopoly over both the production of electricity at power plants and its distribution through the electrical grid. Each utility had a monopoly over a localized region and was responsible for supplying energy to that region. Prices were set by government authorities, allowing for a certain profit over whatever costs a company incurred.

More farsighted sections of the American ruling class understood that because of its crucial role in economic life, the stability of the electrical system was critical to the stability of capitalism as a whole. It was necessary, therefore, to safeguard it from the unconstrained play of market forces and private interests. This was done not only for electricity, but for other crucial industries as well, particularly in transportation and communication.

The move to deregulate began in the 1970s, initially under the Democratic administration of Jimmy Carter. During this period, the old system of regulation and reform began to break down under the impact of the accumulating contradictions of American and world capitalism. The seventies was a decade marked by inflation, a growing crisis of profitability and the collapse of the post-war monetary system. The American ruling class demanded a free hand to increase its profit rate by removing government restrictions on its operations, and intensifying its exploitation of the working class. Deregulation began with the airline industry, which was bound up with the crushing of the PATCO air traffic controllers strike—carried out by the Republican Reagan administration following plans originally drawn up by Carter.

Deregulation of the electrical industry began somewhat later, mainly under another Democrat, Bill Clinton. A crucial step came in 1992 with the passage of the Energy Policy Act, which gave the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) the power to force utilities to open their transmission networks to independent power producers. This provided the basis for breaking the monopoly of utilities over both production and distribution. The Clinton administration took more direct action in 1996, when FERC issued an order stepping up pressure on states to deregulate.

During the next several years, a number of states began carrying out this order. In 1996, California was one of the first to deregulate. It was followed by 24 states, mainly in the Midwest and Northeast, including Ohio in 1999. The late 1990s also saw the development of a national wholesale energy market for the purchase and sale of bulk energy contracts. Until its bankruptcy, Enron was the market’s dominant player. A national, unregulated market in the sale of electrical power was superimposed on a locally segmented system of utilities. This is the source of the patchwork character of the present system, where electricity can flow from one region to another without any unified controls or standards.

The deregulation of the electrical system was bound up with an enormous increase in the pressure of big investors and financial institutions—a pressure exerted through the stock market—for the highest possible short-term returns on their investments. Long-term investment in plant, equipment, maintenance, training, research and development have all been sacrificed on the altar of immediate profits and bullish financial reports that will boost the price of company shares. This has encouraged not only neglect and recklessness, but also criminality, as corporate CEOs resort to accounting fraud and similar means to pad the bottom line.

The Bush administration is responding to the blackout in a predictable manner: in addition to demanding that consumers bear the cost of any upgrades in the transmission system, the administration is using the crisis to push through even further deregulation. In the wake of popular anger at the blackout, the administration has focused attention on some proposals for federally mandated transmission guidelines, guidelines that would replace the existing patchwork of state and local authorities.

These standards, however, would be part a broader plan being pushed by Pat Wood, the head of FERC and a fervent supporter of deregulation. The plan is designed to further break up state regulation of the transmission system and place utilities under the supervision of regional grid organizations, some of which have already been set up. The plans have been stalled because states that still have regulated utility monopolies, especially in the southern part of the country, are reluctant to give up their control. The opposition has stiffened, given that those regions that have begun deregulation—California and now the Northeast and Midwest—have experienced the most trouble with their electrical systems.

The administration’s energy bill also includes a repeal of the Public Utility Holding Company Act. Repeal of this Depression-era legislation will further open up the electrical system, including transmission systems, to the domination of energy giants.

Repeal is being pushed by the larger utility holding companies, such as American Electric Power of Columbus, Ohio. AEP is part owner of one of the transmission lines that failed early on the day of the blackout. Repeal is also supported by energy giants such as Exxon Mobil and General Electric, which want access to utilities. As price restrictions on energy are progressively eliminated, utility ownership will become a very lucrative business.

This policy will only exacerbate the contradictions that led to the blackout earlier last week. What is required is a nationally—and indeed internationally—integrated electrical system that is organized rationally and subject to strict control.

The subservience of the energy system to unconstrained market forces has created more than one social disaster. In addition to the blackout in the Northeast and Midwest, California residents were subjected to the consequences of energy deregulation in 2000 and 2001. Market manipulation by energy giants produced a power shortage that led to rolling blackouts and rising costs for consumers.

Electrical production has run into one of the fundamental contradictions of capitalism: that between the social character of production—in which millions of people vitally depend on reliable energy—and the private control of the means of production. More these catastrophic events will undoubtedly follow, so long as such an important social resource remains subordinated to a system based upon production for profit.  



Your Name:
Your URL: (or email)
Subject:       
Comment:
For verification, please type the word you see on the left:


Other entries in
6 Nov 2009 @ 04:32: On re-naming NCN to R.......
22 Aug 2006 @ 18:44: Prayer for a Good Death
8 May 2005 @ 18:48: Happy Mother-Killers' Day
29 Aug 2004 @ 23:10: Breakup Of The North Pole
21 Apr 2004 @ 15:27: Being Dislike and/or Being Misunderstood
13 Apr 2004 @ 19:09: Reiki
13 Apr 2004 @ 08:09: Photos of Iraqi children killed
19 Jan 2004 @ 12:11: Bits of info....
24 Dec 2003 @ 11:25: A Holiday Message for hope, peace and freedom.....
10 Oct 2003 @ 12:54: Conversation on Spiritual Community



[< Back] [Ascend, Evolve, Expand.....] [PermaLink]?