Showing category "time for real changes" (Show all posts)

There Is No Energy Crisis

Posted by Roberto Enamorado on Tuesday, May 25, 2010, In : time for real changes 


Our technical reality…

There is no energy crisis * Energy is more than abundant * What we have on our hands is a human development crisis!

*This document is simply to create awareness on energy options. The Zeitgeist Movement is not claiming to develop or have an affiliation to the companies or technologies mentioned below.

Sphelar  - Unlike conventional flat solar cells, Sphelar® takes on a spherical shape, which makes it capable of ...


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Blah We Can Believe In :) What did you vote for?

Posted by Roberto Enamorado on Thursday, December 3, 2009, In : time for real changes 

What happened to all the talks about racism?

Did you really think that was going to be addressed?

What happened to corporate accountability (oh thats right, the best of Wall Street is now running our country)?

Why won't the president mention building number seven (instead of sounding like a charismatic right wing Fox news reporter)?

Why hasn't he completely abolished the Patriot Act (not that you ever had rights, you've just never been targeted by the establishment)?

What an insult to individuals...
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Here goes a brief and objective bio


By: Alex C. Called an idealist, for one so cynical, turned realist, by the pseudo-empirical. Because “Power To The People” hasn’t been stressed enough, and there is no single unifying idea which could describe the thoughts behind Roberto Enamorado, here goes a brief and objective bio. An unusual kid, one who was street smart without being from the streets, A native New Yorker, who had always lived in a desirable zip code, which sharply contrasted with the visits to his parents native home in Honduras, Central America; Roberto knew the path often avoided, because out of curiosity, that path had been explored. One could wonder where Roberto’s thoughts of empowerment originated. Perhaps it was the early love for subculture, the beginning of which could be traced to the 6th grade, where he was one of the few kids who when asked about his favorite type of music, responded with I like “house music.” The interest in subcultures would continue. In the mid 90’s, it was the non commercial hip hop which caught his attention. Electronica followed and finally a taste for the eclectic was firmly established. All of the music, the clothing, the idea behind the image carried out the same message. There is a different world out there, and this world, corporations can’t seem to quite grasp. Then there were the comic books, a world of their own, bloody, violent, exaggerated anarchical and fantastical. And from these comics grew personal art, curious art, a drawing of Disney’s Thumper, superheroes, Graffiti and finally an individual style, art which is marketable, but with a distinct air of not being for sale.