The WASFAA News
       June/July 2001 Online Publication       
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A Rousing Conference Welcome...
Conference co-chairs, Toni DuBois and James Martin started the conference off with a bit of tongue-in-cheek bantering that had the audience buzzing. We have included their dialogue here for those who missed it as well as those of us who want to relive the fun. James Martin from Idaho State University welcomed participants and went into a pseudo David Letterman routine:

You know you live in California if:
  1. You make over $250,000 a year and still can't afford a house.
  2. It's sprinkling outside, so you leave for work an hour early to avoid all the weather-related accidents.
  3. You can't remember . . .is pot legal?
  4. You have a very strong opinion about where your coffee beans are grown, and can taste the difference between Sumatran and Ethiopian.
  5. You know which restaurant serves the freshest arugula.
  6. You can't remember . . .is pot legal?
  7. The guy in line at Starbucks, wearing the baseball cap, sunglasses, and looks like George Clooney, IS George Clooney.
  8. Your car insurance costs as much as your house payment.
  9. Two overcast days in a row drive you mad.
  10. A family of four owns six vehicles.
  11. Even if the store is across the street, you drive there.
  12. Yeah, you're sure . . .. pot is legal!

And finally a question:

How many Californians does it take to screw in a light bulb?
       None.
Californians cannot afford to turn on the lights!

Toni DuBois then took the mike and defended her state valiantly with the following:
America has engaged in some finger wagging lately because California doesn't have enough electricity to meet its needs. The rest of the country (including George W. Bush's energy secretary Spencer Abraham, who wants Californians to suffer through blackouts as justification for drilling for oil in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge) seems to be just fine with letting Californians dangle in the breeze without enough power to meet their needs. They laugh at Californians' frivolity.
Well, everybody. Here's how it really is:
  • California ranks 48th in the nation in power consumed per person.
  • California grows more than half the nation's fruit, nuts and vegetables.
  • We're keeping them. We need something to eat when the power goes out.
  • We grow 99 percent or more of the nation's almonds, artichokes, dates, figs, kiwifruit, olives, persimmons, pistachios, prunes, raisins and walnuts. Hope you won't miss them.
  • California is the nation's number one dairy state. We're keeping our dairy products. We'll need plenty of fresh ones since our refrigerators can't be relied upon. Got milk?
  • We Californians are gonna keep all our high-tech software in state.
  • Silicon Valley is ours, after all. Without enough electricity, which you're apparently keeping for yourselves, we just plain don't have enough software to spare.
  • We're keeping all our airplanes. California builds a good percentage of the commercial airliners available to fly you people to where you want to go. When yours wear out, you'd better hope Boeing's Washington plant can keep you supplied.
  • There isn't enough electricity here to allow us to export any more planes than we need for ourselves. And while we're at it, we're keeping all our high-tech aerospace stuff, too, like the sophisticated weapons systems that let you sleep at night, unworried you might wake up under the rule of some foreign kook.
  • Oh, yeah, and if you want to make a long-distance call, remember where the satellite components and tracking systems come from. Maybe you could get back in the habit of writing letters.
  • Want to see a blockbuster movie this weekend? Come to California. We make them here. Since we'll now have to make them with our own electricity, we're keeping them. Even if we shot them somewhere else, the labs, printing facilities, editing facilities, and sound facilities are all here.
  • Want some nice domestic wine? We produce over 17 million gallons per year. We'll need all of it to drown our sorrows when we think about the fact that no matter how many California products we export to make the rest of America's lives better, America can't see its way clear to help us out with a little electricity. You may no longer have any of our wine.
  • You all complain that we don't build enough power plants. Well, you don't grow enough food, write enough software, make enough movies, build enough airplanes and defense systems or make enough wine.
This is your last warning, America.
Lighten (us) up before it's too late.



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