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ROYSEVEN - IN YOUR BEDROOM
Night, keep me sane, stop these hands from being brave,
this lust, this passion- please, I never asked / I´ll never need.
Open your eyes, I´m the same as every man and every child,
this figure that you see isn´t half the one he´s going to come to be.
But I can´t talk, no I can´t talk.
And the lamplight in your bedroom is calling me, is calling me.
The wide eyed, the consumed, obsession is - the only way to lose.
Easy sins, don´t be afraid
I haven´t, I haven't changed that much
but I won´t talk no.
I won´t whisper nightmares as I sleep.
But I can´t stop, no I can´t stop.
And the lamplight in your bedroom is calling me, is calling me.
The wide eyed, the consumed, obsession is - the only way to lose.
Jesus greets me “looks just like me“ - sounds like something I´ve learned.
And the lamplight in your bedroom is calling me, is calling me.
The wide eyed, the consumed, obsession is - the only way to lose.
Kissing Edison’s Light Bulb Goodbye
By James Kanter
Its days are numbered in Europe (and elsewhere). The European Commission formally adopted new regulations on Wednesday that will effectively phase out incandescent light bulbs in Europe by 2012.
The switch to energy-efficient lamps for homes, offices, streets and factories, officials said, would generate energy savings equivalent to the annual electricity consumption of Belgium – or the yearly output of 20 power stations of 500 megawatts.
For their part, consumers would save 11 billion euros — or $14 billion — each year that they otherwise would have spent on energy bills.
The European energy commissioner Andris Piebalgs said the goal was “replacing last century lighting products” with technologies that “will keep the same quality of lighting, while saving energy, CO2 and money.”
After 2012, consumers in Europe will have two choices: high-efficiency halogen lamps, which can yield energy savings of up to 50 percent compared to conventional incandescents; or compact fluorescent lamps, or C.F.L.s, which can provide up to 75 percent savings over conventional light bulbs.
In promulgating the regulations, Commission officials stressed that consumers would not see a degradation in their aesthetic experiences of lamplight, and that the new bulbs were safe — assertions that many homeowners have been vigorously debating here at Green Inc., with similar regulations looming in the United States.