Green gimmicks always fail. But like all leftist policies, that just means more money has to be put into making them work.
The SeaPod, developed by the ocean-innovation technology company Ocean Builders, was meant to be the first of many pieces of “revolutionary blue technology,” the company’s mission statement says, meant to make “the 72% of the world that is covered in water into an eco-sustainable paradise.”
The ultra-minimalist home has an 830-square-foot living space divided into three levels, featuring all of the home essentials including a bedroom, living room, kitchen, bathroom, and space for storage.
It doesn’t state how many of those 830-square-feet are actually underwater.
At its grand unveiling on September 22, a futuristic luxury model home meant to float on the water toppled over in front of an audience that included Panama’s president, Laurentino Cortizo.
probably a green scam event designed to attract funding and preorders from suckers with their cobbled together floating trash + guaranteed rose colored media coverage.
An award-winning New York University organic chemistry teacher was fired after 82 students signed a petition to get rid of him for making his course ‘too hard.’
Dr. Maitland Jones Jr., 84, used to teach at Princeton until he semi-retired in 2007.
Dr. Jones then took a job teaching organic chemistry at NYU on a yearly contract.
The students claimed in the petition that his course was too hard and blamed Dr. Jones for their failing grades.
“We are very concerned about our scores, and find that they are not an accurate reflection of the time and effort put into this class,” the petition said, according to The New York Times.
Green gimmicks always fail. But like all leftist policies, that just means more money has to be put into making them work.
The SeaPod, developed by the ocean-innovation technology company Ocean Builders, was meant to be the first of many pieces of “revolutionary blue technology,” the company’s mission statement says, meant to make “the 72% of the world that is covered in water into an eco-sustainable paradise.”
The ultra-minimalist home has an 830-square-foot living space divided into three levels, featuring all of the home essentials including a bedroom, living room, kitchen, bathroom, and space for storage.
It doesn’t state how many of those 830-square-feet are actually underwater.
At its grand unveiling on September 22, a futuristic luxury model home meant to float on the water toppled over in front of an audience that included Panama’s president, Laurentino Cortizo.