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MediaCynic.com Homepage | Environment

Al Sharpton and Pat Robertson...United?

The sound you hear is Hell freezing over: Pat Robertson and Al Sharpton are appearing in ad together to urge Americans to unite on the issue of climate change. It's part of a series of ads put together by Al Gore. It's a funny -- and extremely effective -- ad.



Posted on April 21, 2008
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Gore Takes Aim at Global Warming Skeptics

Al Gore will appear on 60 Minutes this Sunday for an interview with Lesley Stahl. Gore says that those that don't believe that global warming is man-made are like people who believe the Earth is flat.



Posted on March 27, 2008
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The War on Science Continues

Center for Disease Control officials have stated that the White House muzzled their representative when she testified to Congress about the effects that Global Warming will have on the health of Americans. CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding, told a Senate hearing that climate change will have a "broad range of impacts on the health of Americans." But she wasn't allowed to say with any specificity what those impacts will be, because her report was censored for political reasons.
Her testimony before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee had much less information on health risks than a much longer draft version Gerberding submitted to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review in advance of her appearance. "It was eviscerated," said a CDC official, familiar with both versions, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the review process.

The official said that while it is customary for testimony to be changed in a White House review, these changes were particularly "heavy-handed." The White House office had no comment on Gerberding's testimony. Gerberding could not be reached late Tuesday for comment.

The deletions directed by the White House included details on how many people might be adversely affected because of increased warming and the scientific basis for some of the CDC's analysis on what kinds of diseases might be spread in a warmer climate and rising sea levels, according to another official who had seen the original version. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), the committee chairwoman, said the Bush administration "should immediately release Dr. Gerberding's full, uncut statement, because the public has a right to know all the facts about the serious threats posed by global warming."
We may not have seen the report, but an earlier report by the Pentagon stated that Global Warming is a much bigger threat than terrorism, and that it will cause extreme weather, rising oceans and the spread of tropical diseases. That report got out before Dick Cheney got his handy redacting pen ready.

President Bush's War on Science continues. He's doing a much better job of muzzling America's scientists than he is at muzzling Al-Qaeda terrorists.

Posted on October 25, 2007
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Arctic Sea Melt is Increasing

A new report from the U.N.'s weather team says that the recent rate of ice melt in the Arctic is "alarming."
Record melting of Arctic sea ice this year sent a "very alarming" signal about warming at the North Pole, but it couldn't all definitely be blamed on manmade climate change, the U.N.'s top weatherman said on Tuesday. The amount of Arctic ice which melted this summer beat a previous record, set two years ago, by an area more than four times the size of Britain, a 30-year satellite record shows.

"This year was quite exceptional ... the melting of the Arctic ice ... it's quite spectacular," Michel Jarraud, secretary general of the World Meteorological Organisation, told Reuters. "Can it all be attributed to climate change? That's very difficult. It's very, very alarming," he said. His answer to how best to interpret the melt was -- "let's do more research." "What it means is that we have to monitor that very, very carefully. It's a warning signal."

Melting of sea ice doesn't affect sea levels because it's entire volume is already in the water, but scientists fear if it melted that could trigger more warming and melting of ice sheets over Greenland, which could raise sea levels by 7 meters. Asked if scientists should have better predicted the rate of sea ice melting now seen Jarraud said: "I don't know the answer. It's a difficult question. Some of the models predicted faster melting than others." The prospects for avoiding dangerous climate change depended on the world putting in place measures to cut emissions of greenhouse gases blamed for heating the planet, he said.
The budgets for studying global warming and other important issues are quite small; the scientists are working at a real disadvantage. NOAA, for example, has a tiny budget because the Bush administration simply refuses to spend money on scientific research.

Technology is the answer to global warming and freeing the U.S. from its dependence on foreign oil. That is where we should be spending our money: research on everything from stem cells to the environment.

Posted on October 3, 2007
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Supreme Court Rules EPA Can Regulate Auto Emissions

The Supreme Court dealt a blow to the Bush White House today by ruling that the EPA does have the authority to regulate auto emissions. The Bush administration has taken the illogical position that carbon emissions from cars don't qualify as "pollution" under the Clean Air Act. All one has to do is stand behind a running Humvee and breathe deeply for for five minutes to come to the conclusion that the emissions are, indeed, pollution.
The U.S. Supreme Court ordered Bush administration environmental officials to reconsider their refusal to regulate greenhouse-gas emissions, giving a boost to advocates of stronger action against global warming. The justices, voting 5-4, today said the Environmental Protection Agency didn't follow the requirements of the Clean Air Act in 2003 when it opted not to order cuts in carbon emissions from new cars and trucks.

"EPA has offered no reasoned explanation for its refusal to decide whether greenhouse gases cause or contribute to climate change," Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the majority. The ruling doesn't necessarily mean the EPA will have to impose new regulations. Still, it adds to growing pressure on the administration, which has resisted mandatory limits on carbon emissions. The decision is a setback for General Motors Corp. and other automakers and for utilities with coal-fired plants, including American Electric Power Co. and Southern Co.

Environmentalists and 12 states, including California and Massachusetts, are seeking to force the federal agency to limit emissions from new cars and trucks. New York is leading a separate state effort to curb power-plant emissions. The decision also bolsters efforts by California and other states to enact their own climate-change regulations. In challenging those rules, automakers have pointed to the EPA's conclusion that carbon dioxide isn't an "air pollutant" subject to federal and state regulation under the U.S. Clean Air Act.

The majority today rejected the agency's conclusion. "Greenhouse gases fit well within the Clean Air Act's capacious definition of 'air pollutant,'" Stevens wrote.
Not surprisingly, Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito all dissented from Stevens' opinion. The court ruled on three questions:
--Do states have the right to sue the EPA to challenge its decision?

--Does the Clean Air Act give EPA the authority to regulate tailpipe emissions of greenhouse gases?

--Does EPA have the discretion not to regulate those emissions?

The court said yes to the first two questions. On the third, it ordered EPA to re-evaluate its contention that it has the discretion not to regulate tailpipe emissions. The court said the agency has so far provided a "laundry list" of reasons that include foreign policy considerations.
The ruling that the EPA does have the authority to regulate tailpipe emissions is the most significant part of the decision, which will have a major effect on the future of autos in the U.S. The EPA must explain why it is refusing to regulate those emissions, and in future it most likely will as pressure grows for it to step up to the plate on this issue.

Posted on April 2, 2007
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Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth Takes Home Best Documentary Oscar

Photo of Al Gore at 2007 OscarsAn Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore's documentary about global warming, won the Oscar for Best Documentary last night. It was a well-deserved honor. Gore (pictured with producer Davis Guggenheim), said that the issue of global warming is not a Republican or Democratic issue, or even a political issue: that it is a moral issue.

Earlier in the broadcast, Gore and Leonardo DiCaprio appeared onstage in a very funny bit spoofing some pundits' speculation that Gore would use his Oscar speech to announce he was running for president of the United States. After DiCaprio asked Gore if there was anything he wanted to announce tonight, Gore pulled out a prepared speech and began reading "My Fellow Americans, tonight..." when the orchestra began playing loudly, indicating that his time was up. Gore seemed relaxed and natural and his acceptance speech was gracious. So, no announcement from Al yet. But there's still plenty of time to throw his hat into the ring.

Posted on February 26, 2007
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Schwarzenegger Signs Global Warming Bill

Today California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed into law groundbreaking legislation to fight global warming.
Standing on picturesque Treasure Island with San Francisco's skyline in the background, Schwarzenegger called the fight against global warming one of the most important issues of modern times. "We simply must do everything we can in our power to slow down global warming before it is too late," Schwarzenegger said during an address before signing the bill. Mayor Gavin Newsom and New York Gov. George Pataki, as well as Democratic legislators, joined Schwarzenegger for the high-profile ceremony. British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who struck a deal with Schwarzenegger over the summer to develop clean technologies, joined the ceremony via video link. (AP) California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger listens to a question during his first news conference in... Full Image Blair called the bill-signing "a proud day for political leadership" and "a historic day for the rest of the world, as well."

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It imposes a first-in-the-nation emissions cap on utilities, refineries and manufacturing plants in a bid to curb the gases that scientists blame for warming the Earth. Two years ago, a state board adopted tight regulations on automobile tailpipe emissions, an initiative that is being challenged in federal court by automakers.

Schwarzenegger also was expected to sign a second Democrat-sponsored global warming bill with consequences beyond the state's borders. That bill will prohibit California's large utilities and corporations from entering long-term power contracts with suppliers whose electricity sources do not meet the state's greenhouse gas emission standards. The measure by Sen. President Pro Tem Don Perata is intended to force coal plants in the western U.S. to install cleaner technologies.
So goes California, so goes the rest of the nation. California has the seventh largest economy in the world; if it won't do business with coal plants that don't use clean technologies, those coal plants will have to change. It's interesting to see who's gotten behind Schwarzenegger on this initiative: Warren Buffett, Tony Blair and New York governor Pataki (who has his eye on the White House in 2008) are all backing the governor in his efforts.

Posted on September 27, 2006
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Ten Percent of Arctic Perennial Ice Lost in One Summer

Scientists announced this week that new satellite images show huge new holes in the Arctic ice which are a consequence of global warming.
The Arctic's thick perennial sea ice typically survives the warmth of the summer and lasts through the year. But satellite images taken in late August show that up to 10 percent of the perennial sea ice has been fractured by summer storms. The surprising change involves an area larger than the size of the British Isles.

The striking openings in the pack ice were found north of Svalbard, Norway and extend to the Russian Arctic all the way to the North Pole. This condition is likely due to the thinning and extra mobility in the European section of the central Arctic ice pack seen in recent years.

"This situation is unlike anything observed in previous record low ice seasons," said Mark Drinkwater of the European Space Agency's Oceans/Ice Unit. "It is highly imaginable that a ship could have passed from Spitzbergen or Northern Siberia through what is normally pack ice to reach the North Pole without difficulty." The minimum ice extent—the lowest amount of ice recorded in the area annually—has shrunk from 3 million square miles in the early 1980's to less than 2 million square miles in 2005. A recent study showed that between 2004 and 2005, the ice shrunk by 14 percent, a decrease in area the size of Texas.

"If this anomaly trend continues, the North-East Passage or "Northern Sea Route" between Europe and Asia will be open over longer intervals of time, and it is conceivable we might see attempts at sailing around the world directly across.
That's nice if you feel like sailing around the world using the Northern Sea Route during the winter months, but it's not so nice for the rest of the planet as we continue to lose our polar ice caps and see rising sea levels.

But instead of doing something about global warming (which has the potential to kill millions of people from flooding alone), let's instead focus our attention on something which is so much more important: like busting Willie Nelson for smoking dope.

Posted on September 21, 2006
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Schwarzenegger Leads the Way With Global Warming Initiative

Fed up with President Bush's willful ignorance on the subject of global warming, California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has signed his own global warming pact with British prime minister Tony Blair. The pact, between Calfornia and Britain, addresses capping of carbon dioxide emissions which are the primary cause of global warming.
California is forging ahead with the most aggressive U.S. program to reduce global warming -- a plan that pits Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger against fellow Republican George W. Bush. Both the governor and his state's Democratic-led legislature want to make California -- the world's eighth largest economy -- a model to follow with caps in greenhouse gas emissions that the U.S. president rejects.

State politicians still are hammering out differences over the proposed Global Warming Solutions Act. If passed, it is likely to play a role in November's vote for governor and in national politics for years to come. Schwarzenegger -- branded "very green for a Republican" by the conservation group Sierra Club -- became an overnight hero for environmentalists a year ago by setting a goal to cut California's emissions to 1990 levels by 2020.

More recently, he accused fellow Republicans in Washington of lacking leadership on the environment as he signed a global warming accord with British Prime Minister Tony Blair. "We have a pretty brave governor who feels we should take the lead," said Linda Adams, a Democrat Schwarzenegger chose to run California's Environmental Protection Agency. The Democrats say their bill gives the governor's 2020 target "teeth" with an enforceable cap on emissions and mandatory reporting for top polluters like energy companies.
Schwarzenegger isn't the only state official to ignore the U.S. government's position on global warming. Many city mayors and governors have signed the international Kyoto treaty, including Mayor Bloomberg of New York City. The bottom line is this: the smart governors and mayors know that clean air means less health problems and less health-related expenditures for asthma, allergies and heart disease. And if we don't reduce carbon dioxide emissions quickly, the entire planet is going to face rising temperatures, flooding, devastating hurricanes and droughts. Kudos to Governor Schwarzenegger for providing leadership on this issue.

Posted on August 17, 2006
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Mayor Bloomberg, Global Warming and Men's Bermuda Shorts

In an article entitled "I Wore Shorts to Work, and They All Laughed," Eric Wilson of The New York Times considers considers the effect that global warming may have on men's fashions. Apparently, many Wall Street men are quite grumpy because they are still stuck in dark wool suits with a tie during the current heat wave suffocating the East Coast, while women are being given more latitude in what to wear to the office.

Mayor Bloomberg suggested that New Yorkers dress more comfortably for work to deal with the heat but -- alas -- he didn't take his own advice. Nevertheless, Wilson decided to take Bloomberg's challenge and wear shorts to the office.
[C]learly I was not alone in noticing this double standard. The designer Cynthia Rowley had been reading a report from The Associated Press that day that advised women to prepare for the heat wave by wearing dresses, but offered no guidance for men. "I should go down to Wall Street and set up a little booth where I could cut off their pants legs and hem them into shorts," she said. "But they would have to throw away their socks." There was a short-lived shorts moment in the 1950's, abbreviated for that reason.

*****

I wore a dressy pair of low-waisted, narrow knee-length navy twill shorts from Joseph, a white dress shirt, brown loafers (no socks) and a tightly tailored gray jacket from Thom Browne, another designer who put shorts suits in his fall collection. I found myself cooler, strangely confident and, because of that, walking more gaily than usual. But on the street, people stared. Some took pictures. "What country are you from?" asked Joe Gianotti, an insurance executive, who was eating lunch with Jim Silverberg, a manager at the New York Public Library, in Bryant Park, where the temperature approached 100 degrees. Mr. Silverberg wore long sleeves and a tie. Mr. Gianotti had taken his tie off and described himself as something unprintable for wearing it at all. "It is unfair," he said. "Women wear flip-flops and miniskirts, and some of them even have their stomachs out. But if I wore shorts, they'd make a big deal of it in the office. You look around, and all the men have long pants on, so it's obvious that you have to wear them. We're not in Bermuda."

Still, it struck me as defeatist that Mayor Bloomberg would not take his own advice and lighten up. "There are red lines that men won't cross," said Michael Anton, a former speechwriter for President Bush who now works for Rupert Murdoch at News Corp. Under the pseudonym Nicholas Antongiavanni, Mr. Anton wrote The Suit, a book on corporate style.

"Shorts, for the immediate future, are a step too far," he said. "If we ended up dressing identically for work and for leisure pursuits, men would feel intuitively that something has been lost." Comfort, for one thing. But on Friday I wore pants.
While there are designer rumblings about the resurgence of the "suit with short-pants/shorts" mini-trend of 1950's, for now, Mayor Bloomberg continues to show up to work in a dark blue navy worsted suit and tie. So goes Bloomberg, so goes Wall Street, as far as male fashion goes anyway. But still, think of the exciting moment in fashion history if Mayor Bloomberg sauntered into to work wearing Bermuda shorts and a nice jacket. The execs at Brooks Brothers are no doubt trembling in their wingtips over the very thought.

Posted on August 7, 2006
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A Recipe For An Environmental Catastrophe

Enjoy that shrimp cocktail while you can, because shellfish probably won't exist in fifty years or so, if a disturbing new trend continues. Scientists have discovered that rising carbon dioxide levels on the Earth aren't just causing global warming: they are also destroying our oceans. Half of the greenhouse gases spewed into our atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels have ended up in our oceans. That is making the oceans highly acidic. The acidic water is eating through the shells of shellfish such as shrimp and crabs.
[O]cean researchers have found that the huge influx of carbon dioxide since 1800 is making oceans more acidic than they have been for millions of years. If not reversed, this trend could destabilize -- or even threaten --much of the world's marine life, particularly animals that can't adapt to living in a more corrosive environment.

So far, the ocean's pH (the commonly used scale of whether something is acidic or alkaline) has become about 30 per cent more acidic over the past 200 years because humans have added so much carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Scientists say this change has never occurred in the recent history of the planet -- either in such a massive way, or so quickly.

*****

Although experts don't yet have a thorough understanding of all the implications of a more acidic ocean, they do know it has scary potential for all creatures that secrete calcium carbonate to build shells or skeletons, including corals, starfish, snails and many microscopic varieties of plankton. Should nothing be done to stop global warming, scientists predict that oceans could become acidic enough that the shells or skeletons of the most vulnerable marine animals may start to dissolve, possibly as early as 2050.

*****

The reason that oceans are becoming acidic is that carbon dioxide is water-soluble and easily passes from the air into the sea. Most of the carbon in the ocean is in the form of bicarbonate, a familiar ingredient in household baking soda. What is happening in the oceans is the reverse of the common high-school experiment in which vinegar, an acid, is poured on baking soda to produce a fizzy mass of carbon dioxide air bubbles. In this case, the ocean is holding the "baking soda," which is reacting with the influx of carbon dioxide to produce an acid.
Take four or five acidic oceans, two melting polar icecaps and add more carbon dioxide emissions. Blend vigorously with a government that prefers ideology and medieval theology over hard scientific fact and -- voilà! It's a recipe for an environmental catastrophe.

Posted on July 31, 2006
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Iran Bans Foreign Words, Iranian College Students Reduced to Eating Elastic Loaves

During his latest bout of insanity, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has now decided to ban all foreign words. All governmental agencies, newspapers and publications must stop using foreign words immediately, or else the official language watchdog, the Academy of Persian Language and Literature, is going to call in the police. That means no more pizza for Iranian college students. Instead, they can snack on some tasty "elastic loaves." That's not a helicopter in the sky, it's now some "rotating wings." And that's not a mobile phone you're using in Tehran, it's a "companion phone".
The presidential decree, issued earlier this week, orders all governmental agencies, newspapers and publications to use words deemed more appropriate by the official language watchdog, the Farhangestan Zaban e Farsi, or Persian Academy, the Irna official news agency reported.

The academy has introduced more than 2,000 words as alternatives for some of the foreign words that have become commonly used in Iran, mostly from Western languages. The government is less sensitive about Arabic words, because the Quran is written in Arabic. Among other changes, a "chat" will become a "short talk" and a "cabin" will be renamed a "small room," according to official Web site of the academy.
I'd call President Ahmadinejad an ostrich (because he somehow believes that by pretending that foreign words don't exist that somehow that makes them not exist), but -- alas -- it appears that "ostrich" is yet another non-existent foreign word. All right then. He's a large, feathered, flightless avian creature native to Africa. Now, to celebrate Ahmadinejad's decision, let's all go out for some elastic loaves and some brown-colored, carbonated beverages.

Posted on July 29, 2006
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Global Warming and Underwater Methane: Not a Good Thing

Photo of underwater methane bubbles The scientific evidence about global warming just keeps getting more and more disturbing. A new report concludes that when warmer temperatures melt the ice at the north and south pole, huge deposits of methane gas will be released, which will itself cause more global warming, as well as devastating tsunamis.

You remember our friend, methane gas? Methane is a greenhouse gas that is 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide. It's found under the ocean, trapped in methane hydrate -- an ice-like solid made of methane and water -- usually along a continental shelf. If the ice melts or the ocean floor sediments are disturbed, the methane gas is released into the atmosphere.
"We may have less time than we think to do something (about the prospect of global warming)," Dr. Ira Leifer, a marine scientist at University of California Santa Barbara, said in an interview. Leifer is the main author of a study that looks at how "peak blowouts" of melting undersea formations called methane hydrates could release the potent greenhouse gas into the atmosphere. The study was published Thursday in Global Biogeochemical Cycles, a climate science publication.

The distribution of methane hydrates throughout the world is so vast that energy companies hope one day to tap the resource. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that such formations could harbor as much as 200,000 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Hydrate formations exist under hundreds of meters of water in places like the Gulf of Mexico and closer to the surface in permafrost areas of the Arctic. Methane, the main component of the fossil fuel natural gas, has two faces. When burned it releases less carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas that scientists believe are warming the earth, than any other fossil fuel. But if it escapes to the atmosphere without being burned, it can trap heat rapidly because it is a greenhouse gas at least 20 times stronger than carbon dioxide.

The study measured the amount of methane that escaped to the atmosphere from a peak blowout from small volcanoes on the ocean floor off of California. It found that virtually all of the methane escaping from the deep water reached the atmosphere, countering some theories that methane seeps out in tiny bubbles that harmlessly dissolve in the ocean. Leifer said rising temperatures could warm the oceans, creating a feedback loop in which warm temperatures make global warming even worse.
The irony here is that there is enough natural gas (which is primarily composed of methane, in combinaton with ethane, propane, butane, helium and one or two other gases) trapped in the the ocean floor to power the entire world's power needs for quite awhile. Unfortunately, no one has figured out how to extract the methane safely.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), 100,000 to 300 million trillion cu. ft. (tcf) of methane exists globally in hydrate form--most of it in the ocean floor. "There's more energy potential locked up in methane hydrate formations across the world than in all other fossil energy resources combined," says Brad Tomer, director of the Department of Energy's Strategic Center for Natural Gas and Oil.

*****

Methane bound in hydrates could provide the world with an astounding amount of natural gas--if it could be safely extracted.

*****

[I]f methane gas escapes directly to the atmosphere--as a byproduct of extraction, an earthquake or warming ocean waters--the consequences could be dire. Methane is a greenhouse gas 21 times more effective at trapping heat than carbon dioxide. Today, 3000 times more methane exists in hydrate deposits than in the atmosphere. Releasing even a fraction of this amount would amplify global warming. The decomposition of hydrates near the surface of the sea floor could even trigger tsunamis by causing landslides on the continental slope.
So, if we could figure out how to extract methane safely, we could solve our energy needs, until we figure out table top fusion or some other revolutionary energy source. But if we don't drastically reduce our carbon dioxide emissions, the methane gas trapped in the Arctic ice could be released, causing more global warming and tsunamis.

This would be an excellent time to make sure that flood insurance on your house is up to date.

Posted on July 21, 2006
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Will Ferrell Plays Bush on Global Warming

Photo of Will Ferrell as President BushComedian Will Ferrell has donned his George Bush persona once again -- this time to discuss his thoughts on the "so-called global warmings." You can see the new video here.

As he did during his 2004 video, Ferrell plays Bush standing out in the meadow of his Crawford Ranch, leaning on a rustic fence as horses frolic in the background. Bush takes a break from "playing frisbee golf with Condi Rice and Dick Cheney" to talk about the science behind global warmings ("The sun heats up the Earth's crusts, which increases lava flows...") and to warn Americans against listening to liberals try to make him look bad using "facts."

And speaking of global warming, Al Gore's new movie, An Inconvenient Truth is really worth seeing. It's the most relaxed, personable Al Gore you've ever seen. Gore uses those pesky "facts" to show how global warming is very real, indeed. He shows new scientific data that goes back 650,000 years. Global temperature has a direct correlation with the rise and fall of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. At no point in the last 650,000 years before the preindustrial era did the CO2, concentration go above 300 parts per million. Not once. Today, there is more than 350 parts per million of carbon dioxide, and in 45 years, computer models show that will rise to above 600 parts per million. So what does that mean? Because it's never happened in the last 650,000 years, no one knows. But if global temperature tracks CO2, then rising temperatures on the Earth could cause catastrophic consequences. You can read more at ClimateCrisis.net.

Posted on July 20, 2006
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U.S. Joins The Anti-Whaling Fight

The United States has decided to take a stand and join the fight against whaling.
The United States and some of its closest allies are launching a concerted campaign to block a possible return to large-scale whaling and to reverse the gains made by pro-whaling forces in the international commission that regulates hunting of the massive creatures.

The political shift in the International Whaling Commission, which was on full display last week when the body narrowly backed a nonbinding resolution in favor of commercial whaling, has alarmed environmentalists and senior officials in the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Britain. In interviews last week, several said they feel a duty to mount an organized effort to ensure that the 20-year-old whaling moratorium remains intact.

"This is now a period in human history where the whaling issue will be decided once and for all," said Ian Campbell, Australia's minister for the environment and heritage, in an interview Thursday. "Whaling will be stopped, if I have my way, with the only exception being for aboriginal subsistence whaling."

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William T. Hogarth, who directs NOAA's fisheries service and was elected to chair the Whaling Commission for the next three years, said that while the international community is deadlocked, whaling countries such as Japan are expanding their hunts. He added that some whale populations have yet to recover because they are still being hunted, being killed in ship collisions or becoming entangled in fishing gear. "We're at an impasse, but we're killing more whales," Hogarth said, referring to Japan, Norway and Iceland. "We're not really protecting whales in the IWC, which we should be." Anti-whaling countries won a few key votes during the commission's five-day annual meeting on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts that ended Tuesday. They defeated a proposal that would have required secret ballots on whaling issues.

But Bush administration officials said they were alarmed by the 33 to 32 vote in favor of the nonbinding declaration, which says the commission is "about managing whaling to ensure whale stocks are not over-harvested, rather than protecting all whales irrespective of their abundance." It would take a three-quarters vote to repeal the current ban on whaling.

Claudia A. McMurray, assistant secretary for oceans and international environmental and scientific affairs at the State Department, said the declaration "will embolden [whaling countries] to work harder, so we have a challenge ahead of us. . . . We can clearly see they are going to continue to try to make changes in the International Whaling Commission as we move forward."
It would be terribly cynical to assume that there is a connection between Japan's Iraq troop withdrawal and the U.S.'s willingness to stand up to Japan. But whatever the reason, kudos to the State Department for taking a stand on this important issue.

Posted on June 26, 2006
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Earth Is the Hottest It's Been In 400 Years

Scientists from The National Academy of Sciences reported to Congress that the Earth is the hottest it has been in 400 years.
The Earth is the hottest it has been in at least 400 years, probably even longer. The National Academy of Sciences, reaching that conclusion in a broad review of scientific work requested by Congress, reported Thursday that the "recent warmth is unprecedented for at least the last 400 years and potentially the last several millennia."

A panel of top climate scientists told lawmakers that the Earth is running a fever and that "human activities are responsible for much of the recent warming." Their 155-page report said average global surface temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere rose about 1 degree during the 20th century. The report was requested in November by the chairman of the House Science Committee, Rep. Sherwood Boehlert, R-N.Y., to address naysayers who question whether global warming is a major threat.

Last year, when the House Energy and Commerce Committee chairman, Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, launched an investigation of three climate scientists, Boehlert said Barton should try to learn from scientists, not intimidate them. The Bush administration also has maintained that the threat is not severe enough to warrant new pollution controls that the White House says would have cost 5 million Americans their jobs.
It is not logical to say that reducing pollution costs jobs. If anything, it will create jobs as new industry industries emerge. And by reducing the levels of pollution, we reduce asthma, lung cancer and chronic pulmonary disease which saves the goverement money by reducing healthcare costs. Global warming is real. Pollution-related diseases and death are real. And anyone who still can't accept that is using emotion, not facts, to make policy decisions.

Posted on June 22, 2006
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Whales 1, Japan 0

In a last-minute surprise victory for anti-whaling nations such as Australia and the United States, Japan failed in its attempt to gain a majority of pro-whaling seats on the International Whaling Commission. The Commission is meeting in St. Kitts and Nevis.
Japan suffered an unexpected and total defeat when it tried to start attacking a 20-year-old ban on commercial whaling at the International Whaling Commission's meeting in the Caribbean state of St Kitts and Nevis last night. The member countries of the UN whaling treaty voted down two proposals by Japan - the most significant one for secret ballots so that small Pacific and Caribbean nations that receive Japanese aid could unpick the protection of whales without fear of retribution.

The other proposal sought to prevent the commission from discussing the fate of dolphins and porpoises as well as whales. Ian Campbell, Australia's environment minister and a leader of the anti-whaling bloc, said: "The great victory is that we have raised the levels of understanding of this issue to levels that have probably not been seen since the 1970s. "Tens of thousands of whales have been saved because of the moratorium that is under threat." Conservationists and anti-whaling countries had predicted that the Japanese were likely to win a narrow overall majority of pro-whaling nations at this year's meeting.

However, quiet lobbying by anti-whaling countries led by Australia, Britain, New Zealand and South Africa, and environmental groups, appeared to have seen off the threat, though only by the narrowest of margins. Earlier, in the first vote of the five-day talks, anti-whaling nations managed to hold on to a majority in a vote about whether to drop an item about the conservation of small whale, porpoise and dolphin species from the agenda. The vote was won by 32 votes to 30, with one known pro-whaling nation, Senegal, absent and Denmark abstaining. Japan had opened the conference with a demand for the resumption of commercial whaling. Japan and other whaling nations such as Norway and Iceland almost got a simple majority at the annual IWC meeting a year ago in South Korea, but some allies failed to pay their dues and could not vote and others did not turn up. It is unclear as yet who let them down this time.

Sarah Duthie, of Greenpeace, said: "Whaling history may not have been rewritten this year but it was too close for comfort. The anti-whaling countries must see this as a wake-up call and add action to their rhetoric. "Greenpeace will once again challenge the whalers on the high seas; the question is, what are the anti-whaling countries prepared to do?"
It was a close call and it's not over yet. It's time for countries like England, the U.S. and Australia to stand up to the Japan and its absolutely revolting stance on the murder of this important, endangered species. To slaughter whales for use in dog food and Japanese fast food restaurants is the height of barbarism and reckless endangerment of the ecosystem.

As Carl Sagan pointed out in his groundbreaking series Cosmos:
"A typical whale song lasts for perhaps fifteen minutes; the longest, about an hour. Often it is repeated, identically, beat for beat, measure for measure, note for note. Occasionally, a group of whales will leave their winter waters in the midst of a song and six months later return to continue at precisely the right note, as if there had been no interruption. Very often the members of the group will sing the same song together. By some mutual consensus, some collaborative songwriting, the piece changes month by month, slowly and predictably. These vocalizations are complex. If the songs of the humpback whale are enunciated as a tonal language, the total information content, the number of bits of information in such songs, is some 10 to the power of 6 bits, about the same as the information content of The Iliad or The Odyssey."
Is our legacy as humans to be the destruction of these magnificent creatures whose complex songs were once heard all the way around the world's oceans?

Posted on June 16, 2006
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NASA Scientist Says Icecaps Melting Faster Than Originally Thought

NASA scientist Jim Hansen is the Director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, and is President Bush's top climate modeller. But the White House doesn't like what he has to say and attempted to stop him from talking to the media about what the latest satellite studies show: the Greenland ice cap is melting far faster than scientists had feared - twice as much ice is going into the sea as it was five years ago. This could have a devastating effect on climate change as sea levels begin to rise. Here's what Hansen had to say:
"Yet, a few weeks ago, when I - a NASA climate scientist - tried to talk to the media about these issues following a lecture I had given calling for prompt reductions in the emission of greenhouse gases, the NASA public affairs team - staffed by political appointees from the Bush administration - tried to stop me doing so. I was not happy with that, and I ignored the restrictions. The first line of NASA's mission is to understand and protect the planet."

"This new satellite data is a remarkable advance. We are seeing for the first time the detailed behaviour of the ice streams that are draining the Greenland ice sheet. They show that Greenland seems to be losing at least 200 cubic kilometres of ice a year. It is different from even two years ago, when people still said the ice sheet was in balance. Hundreds of cubic kilometres sounds like a lot of ice. But this is just the beginning. Once a sheet starts to disintegrate, it can reach a tipping point beyond which break-up is explosively rapid. The issue is how close we are getting to that tipping point. The summer of 2005 broke all records for melting in Greenland. So we may be on the edge."

*****

How far can it go? The last time the world was three degrees warmer than today - which is what we expect later this century - sea levels were 25m higher. So that is what we can look forward to if we don't act soon. None of the current climate and ice models predict this. But I prefer the evidence from the Earth's history and my own eyes. I think sea-level rise is going to be the big issue soon, more even than warming itself.

It's hard to say what the world will be like if this happens. It would be another planet. You could imagine great armadas of icebergs breaking off Greenland and melting as they float south. And, of course, huge areas being flooded.

How long have we got? We have to stabilise emissions of carbon dioxide within a decade, or temperatures will warm by more than one degree. That will be warmer than it has been for half a million years, and many things could become unstoppable. If we are to stop that, we cannot wait for new technologies like capturing emissions from burning coal. We have to act with what we have. This decade, that means focusing on energy efficiency and renewable sources of energy that do not burn carbon. We don't have much time left.
The idea of gagging scientists is just absurd. Science is science: let's get the truth out there and see what we can do about it. It may very well be that New Orleans is just the first of many major cities that will have to be abandoned in the next decades, according to climatologists speaking on the BBC last night. One thing's for sure: it's probably better to rent a summer beach home than to buy one these days.

Posted on February 17, 2006
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Cold Weather Ahead As Gulf Stream Weakens

The Guardian reports on a disturbing new scientific finding: the Gulf Stream is dramatically weakening, which could bring extremely violent weather.
Researchers on a scientific expedition in the Atlantic Ocean measured the strength of the current between Africa and the east coast of America and found that the circulation has slowed by 30% since a previous expedition 12 years ago.

The current, which drives the Gulf Stream, delivers the equivalent of 1m power stations-worth of energy to northern Europe, propping up temperatures by 10C in some regions. The researchers found that the circulation has weakened by 6m tonnes of water a second. Previous expeditions to check the current flow in 1957, 1981 and 1992 found only minor changes in its strength, although a slowing was picked up in a further expedition in 1998. The decline prompted the scientists to set up a £4.8m network of moored instruments in the Atlantic to monitor changes in the current continuously.

*****

If the current remains as weak as it is, temperatures in Britain are likely to drop by an average of 1C in the next decade, according to Harry Bryden at the National Oceanography Centre in Southampton who led the study. "Models show that if it shuts down completely, 20 years later, the temperature is 4C to 6C degrees cooler over the UK and north-western Europe," Dr Bryden said.

*****

Uncertainties in climate change models mean that the overall impact on Britain of a slowing down in the current are hard to pin down. "We know that if the current slows down, it will lead to a drop in temperatures in Britain and northern Europe of a few degrees, but the effect isn't even over the seasons. Most of the cooling would be in the winter, so the biggest impact would be much colder winters," said Tim Osborn, of the University of East Anglia climatic research unit.
For those who have no grounding in the sciences it is perhaps difficult to understand that global warming could cause a mini-ice age. This might explain why every time an unnatural cold front sweeps through Europe or the U.S., some idiot declares that the cold snap "proves" there is no global warming.

Posted on December 1, 2005
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New Climate Study Predicts Total Loss of Arctic Tundra

A new warns that if global warming continues at its current pace, that there will be a near-total loss of Arctic tundra. The study appeared in the Journal of Climate. Using conservative estimates of even lower carbon dioxide emissions than we are actually producing, the scientists had a computer model predict what will happen to various regions of the Earth through the year 2300. Alaska becomes a temperate zone, the ocean rise and our world is transformed into something very different than it is today.
"The question is no longer whether we will need to address this problem, but when we will need to address the problem," said Kenneth Caldeira, an author of the study and a climate expert at the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology, based at Stanford University.

"We can either address it now, before we severely and irreversibly damage our climate, or we can wait until irreversible damage manifests itself strongly," Dr. Caldeira said. "If all we do is try to adapt, things will get worse and worse." The paper's lead author, Bala Govindasamy of the Energy Department's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, said it might take 20 or 30 years before the scope of the human-caused changes becomes evident, but from then on there is likely to be no debate.

*****

Consistent with many other studies, the model showed that the Arctic would see the most warming, with average annual temperatures in many parts of Arctic Russia and northern North America rising more than 25 degrees Fahrenheit around 2100. Antarctica would follow suit later, with temperatures there rising sharply around 2200. The impact on vegetation and landscapes would transform large areas of the earth. In the simulation, at least one ecosystem, the scrubby Arctic tundra largely vanishes as climate zones shift hundreds of miles north. Tundra would decline from about 8 percent of the world's land area to 1.8 percent. Alaska, in the model, loses almost all of its evergreen boreal forests and becomes a largely temperate state.
And for those who just cannot accept that global warming is not some kind of communist plot, here's a thought: how about reducing emissions so we're not choking on smog filled with lung cancer-causing pollutants? Think of all the money we'd save on chemotherapy and asthma inhalers.

Posted on November 9, 2005
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Severe Drought Hits the Amazon Rainforest

Reuters reports that the Amazon rainforest is now suffering the worst drought in more than 40 years. The drought is causing wildfires, killing millions of fish and causing illness among the people who live near the river.
[S]cores of piranhas shook in spasms in two inches of water -- what was left of the once flowing Parana de Manaquiri river, an Amazon tributary. Thousands of rotting fish lined the its dry banks. The governor of Amazonas, a state the size of Alaska, has declared 16 municipalities in crisis as the two-month-long drought strands river dwellers who cannot find food or sell crops.

Some scientists blame higher ocean temperatures stemming from global warming, which have also been linked to a recent string of unusually deadly hurricanes in the United States and Central America. Rising air in the north Atlantic, which fuels storms, may have caused air above the Amazon to descend and prevented cloud formations and rainfall, according to some scientists. "If the warming of the north Atlantic is the smoking gun, it really shows how the world is changing," said Dan Nepstadt, an ecologist from the Massachusetts-based Woods Hole Research Institute, funded by the U.S. government and private grants. "The Amazon is a canary in a coal mine for the earth. As we enter a warming trend we are in uncertain territory," he said.

Deforestation may also have contributed to the drought because cutting down trees cuts moisture in the air, increasing sunlight penetration onto land. Other scientists say severe droughts were normal and occurred in cycles before global warming started.
Global warming is real. According to the Pentagon's own scientists, it is the greatest threat Earth faces, far greater than the threat of terrorism. And the weird weather stories just keep coming.

Posted on October 11, 2005
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Saying Goodbye to Marine Animals

The Washington Post has a nice little horror story today about the impending mass marine extinctions.
For years, many scientists and regulators believed the oceans were so vast there was little risk of marine species dying out. Now, some suspect the world is on the cusp of what Ellen K. Pikitch, executive director of the Pew Institute for Ocean Science, calls "a gathering wave of ocean extinctions." Dozens of biologists believe the seas have reached a tipping point, with scores of species of ocean-dwelling fish, birds and mammals edging toward extinction. In the past 300 years, researchers have documented the global extinction of just 21 marine species -- and 16 have occurred since 1972.

*****

Although a number of previous extinctions involved birds and marine mammals, it is the fate of many fish that worries experts. The large-scale industrialization of the fishing industry after World War II, a global boom in oceanfront development and a rise in global temperatures are all causing fish populations to plummet.

"Extinctions happen in the ocean; the fossil record shows that marine species have disappeared since life began in the sea," said Elliott A. Norse, who heads the Marine Conservation Biology Institute in Redmond, Wash. "The question is, are humans a major new force causing marine extinctions? The evidence, and projections scientists are making, suggest that the answer is yes."
It looks like the first act of the new millennium is going to be a doozy, environmentally speaking.

Posted on August 24, 2005
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Clinton and McCain Head to Alaska

It looks like you're going to be hearing more about global warming between now and 2008. Several U.S. senators headed off to Alaska on a fact-finding mission and were pretty shocked by what they found.
Anyone doubting the effects of human activity on global climate change should talk to the people it affects in Alaska and the Yukon, U.S. Sen. John McCain said Wednesday. Fresh from a trip to Barrow, America's northernmost city, McCain said anecdotes from Alaskans and residents of the Yukon Territory confirm scientific evidence of global warming.

"We are convinced that the overwhelming scientific evidence indicated that climate change is taking place and human activities play a very large role," McCain said.

McCain, accompanied by Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., spoke to villagers in Canada whose spruce trees are being attacked by the northward spread of spruce beetles. On Alaska's northern coast, they met Native Alaskans dealing with melting permafrost and coastal erosion.

"I don't think there is any doubt left for anyone who actually looks at the science," Clinton said. "There are still some holdouts, but they are fighting a losing battle. The science is overwhelming, but what is deeply concerning is that climate change is accelerating."

Graham, who declared himself "on the fence" about climate change legislation, said an academic debate about global warming is different in the North. "If you can go to the Native people and listen to their stories and walk away with any doubt that something's going on, I just think you're not listening," he said.
Polls consistently show that Americans aren't happy about all the pollution in the air and toxins in the water. This could play big in upcoming elections: Hillary Clinton and John McCain together talking about global warming is definitely an eye-opener. Even Lindsay Graham is almost convinced that global warming is real after talking to the Inuits. Apparently, miracles do happen occasionally.

Posted on August 19, 2005
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Political Roundup 7-13-05

  • Blogs offered the best first draft of last week's bombings in London. Arianna Huffington said the bombings discredit the Bush adminstration's fly paper theory for the Iraq War.

  • The Bush administration says the U.S. will retain control of the Internet's root servers canceling plans to turn control over to the UN on September, 2006. Some are concerned this could cause the Internet to splinter off into multiple internets.

  • Stars and Stripes reports that this year's desertion numbers of 2,518 are already almost as high as the count for all of last year, which was 2,723.

  • Greg Mitchelle at Editor and Publisher asks if Dick Cheney is the new Baghdad Bob:
    Is it just me, or is Vice President Cheney starting to sound like another balding, rose-colored-glasses wearing war spokesman, Muhammed Saeed al-Sahaf, better known as "Baghdad Bob"?

    Yesterday, after a week of serious criticism, for claiming that the insurgency in Iraq was in its "last throes," Cheney refused to back down, even after Gen. John Abizaid, our top military commander for the Middle East, proclaimed that the insurgency, in fact, was as strong as ever, and "a lot of work" remained to be done to defeat it. Earlier this week, GOP Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska had said he was sick of sunny assertions about the war from the White House, and declared that the United States indeed might be losing, not on the edge of victory.

    Yet Cheney said on Thursday, "If you look at what the dictionary says about 'throes,' it can still be a violent period." He compared this time to the end of World War II when tough battles "occurred just a few months before the end. I see this as a similar situation." Give this man a beret!

    Is it time to start calling him "D.C. Dick"? Or "Baghdad Dick"? Or perhaps "Bunker Bob"?
  • Elizabeth Edwards, the wife of 2004 Vice Presedential candidate John Edwards, is writing a book and a book proposal is being shown now to publishers.

  • This map provides a graphical representation of where the service men and women that have died in Afghanistan and Iraq were from in the U.S.

  • Caspar Weinberger, a two-term Secretary of Defense under Ronald Reagan, has penned a thriller novel with Peter Schweizer called Chain of Command.

  • Eclectech.co.uk offers a humorous take on Britain's need for national ID cards.

  • More liberals believe in ghosts than moderates or conservatives according to an important new Gallup Poll.

  • Schwarzenegger on Global Warming: California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger says that the science is accurate and that the time to fight global warming is now. He is implementing a new greenhouse gas law in California. In a recent speech he said despite what others, including the Bush administration, have said helping the environment does not hurt the economy.
    These steps are great for the environment and great for our economy, too. Many people have falsely assumed that you have to choose between protecting the environment and protecting the economy. Nothing could be further from the truth. In California, we will do both.

    That is why I am travelling around the state and my administration is holding a series of conservation summits for businesses around California, spreading the word that pollution reduction is good.

    Pollution reduction has long been a money saver for businesses. It lowers operating costs, raises profits and creates new and expanded markets for environmental technology.
  • New York Senator Charles Schumer and others have been very critical of the upcoming 25 to Life game. Schumer calls 25 to Life a "cop killer" game and wants it boycotted. The multi-player online game allows players to become a gangster or a law officer.

    Posted on July 13, 2005
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  • Political Roundup 6-30-05

  • Spain has become the third country to allow gay marriage. Same-sex couples can also adopt children. MSNBC.com has more information about Spain's new laws.

  • A new Zogby Poll says that 2/5 of Americans support impeachment if Bush lied about his reasons for going to war in Iraq:
    In a sign of the continuing partisan division of the nation, more than two-in-five (42%) voters say that, if it is found that President Bush did not tell the truth about his reasons for going to war with Iraq, Congress should hold him accountable through impeachment. While half (50%) of respondents do not hold this view, supporters of impeachment outweigh opponents in some parts of the country.

    Among those living in the Western states, a 52% majority favors Congress using the impeachment mechanism while just 41% are opposed; in Eastern states, 49% are in favor and 45% opposed. In the South, meanwhile, impeachment is opposed by three-in-five voters (60%) and supported by just one-in-three (34%); in the Central/Great Lakes region, 52% are opposed and 38% in favor.

    Impeachment is overwhelmingly rejected in the Red States -- just 36% say they agree Congress should use it if the President is found to have lied on Iraq, while 55% reject this view; in the "Blue States" that voted for Massachusetts Democrat John Kerry in 2004, meanwhile, a plurality of 48% favors such proceedings while 45% are opposed.

    A large majority of Democrats (59%) say they agree that the President should be impeached if he lied about Iraq, while just three-in-ten (30%) disagree. Among President Bush's fellow Republicans, a full one-in-four (25%) indicate they would favor impeaching the President under these circumstances, while seven-in-ten (70%) do not. Independents are more closely divided, with 43% favoring impeachment and 49% opposed.
  • Time Inc. said it will comply with a court order requiring it to deliver the subpoenaed records to a grand jury in connection with the Special Counsel's investigation into the Valerie Plame matter. The records include Time Magazine reporter Matthew Cooper's sources on the Valerie Plame case.

  • The Association of British Insurers has issued a new report that says the average annual insurance costs from storms will rise $27 billion by 2080. The new report also states that the annual costs from the U.S. hurricane season will increase by 75%.

  • The Associated Press reports that Mayor Alaa Mahmoud al-Timimi, the Mayor of Baghdad, has threatened to resign:
    "It's useless for any official to stay in office without the means to accomplish his job," al-Timimi told reporters.

    Al-Timimi is seeking $1.5 billion for Baghdad in 2005 but so far has received only $85 million, said his spokesman, Ameer Ali Hasson.

    Efforts to expand Baghdad's water projects were set back earlier this month when insurgents sabotaged a pipeline near Baghdad. Now, some complain the water they do get smells bad, and Hasson acknowledged in some areas, the water gets mixed with sewage.

    "The problem is escalating," said al-Timimi, a Shiite who took office in May 2004.


    Posted on June 30, 2005
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  • Cooney Lands At Exxon

    Former chief of staff to the White House Council on Environmental Quality Phillip Cooney -- best known for his role in altering scientific conclusions in the U.S. government's climate reports -- has landed a cushy new job with Exxon-Mobil, according to Scott McClellan at yesterday's White House Press Briefing.
    Question: Scott, on Philip Cooney, you said earlier today that the White House has been -- that he had been looking at other options for some time. With his move to Exxon, are there concerns now about at least an appearance of impropriety? Today you had Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid comment on this, saying that "the revolving door between the White House and big oil swung open again." Are you concerned that perhaps this is becoming, or could become a distraction from the President's agenda?

    MR. McCLELLAN: I think it's unfortunate that some are trying to divert attention away from what is a strong record of addressing the long-term challenge we face from climate change. This administration has moved forward on initiatives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This administration has moved forward to reduce greenhouse gas intensity by 18 percent, come 2012. And we're on track to meet that commitment. This administration has worked with partners around the world to move forward in partnership on initiatives that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The President launched the methane-to-markets initiative. This is an initiative that will significantly reduce a greenhouse gas emission, and also provide cleaner burning electricity to people. Those are significant efforts.

    We have invested billions of dollars in research when it comes to better understanding the science of climate change. We are investing in new technologies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. So that's just simply someone trying to divert attention away from what is a strong record, when it comes to addressing climate change.

    Question: But are you concerned at all that maybe this might gain some momentum, and perhaps become a larger distraction than it is right now?

    MR. McCLELLAN: That what may gain some momentum? And what impropriety were you referring to?

    Question: Well, Cooney's move to Exxon -- I'm asking if there is any concern about an appearance, at the very least, by some --

    MR. McCLELLAN: Look, in terms of this individual, we wish him well. We appreciate his service.
    And what service Cooney gave! I'm just glad he was rewarded so handsomely for his efforts.

    Posted on June 17, 2005
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    Environmental Chief of Staff Couldn't Take the Heat Over Global Warming

    It looks like Philip Cooney couldn't take the global warming heat: he quit his post as chief of staff at the White House Council on Environmental Quality over the weekend, saying he's "considering his options."
    Documents leaked to a whistle-blower project and published last week in New York Times showed that Mr Cooney repeatedly deleted warnings in official policy papers about climate change. He also emphasised doubts about the scientific research into greenhouse gases.

    The revelation came just 24 hours after President George W. Bush said his administration viewed climate change as a "serious long-term" problem. The White House denied it was politicising science and said Mr. Cooney's changes were part of the normal policy review process.
    Guess somebody got the call that it was time to take one for the team. Look for Mr. Cooney to turn up soon as a highly-paid lobbyist once again.

    Posted on June 13, 2005
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    Political Roundup 6-10-05

  • Time magazine reports that John Edwards has been talking to left-leaning bloggers:
    Although John Edwards isn't officially running for office, he is already courting a key constituency for a possible presidential bid in '08: left-leaning bloggers. Not only did the former VP candidate spend the week guest-blogging on TPMCafe, a new offshoot of the popular Talking Points Memo, but amid his postings on such issues as poverty and globalization, another blog disclosed that he had been the host of an off-the-record dinner with several bloggers at his house in Washington. "Gaining the loyalty of bloggers," noted TAPPED, "is not that hard to do if you just talk to them."
  • BlogPulse, a service which tracks conversations in blogs, offers this graphical look at blog discussion of the Bush Initiatives in 2005 so far.
  • The Iraq Smart Culture Card is a guide for communication and cultural awareness in Iraq.
  • The Boston Herald's Inside Track reports that Steven Spielberg doesn't think the democratic Hollywood base campaigned hard enough during the 2004 election:
    Steven Spielberg is hitting out at Hollywood for not rallying around John Kerry in the last election. The War of the Worlds director apparently feels the film industry wasn't vociferous enough in its support for the Bay State's junior senator. Apparently, Steven wasn't paying attention when Ben Affleck, Barbra Streisand, Brad Pitt, Jennifer Aniston, the Baldwins, etc. prostrated themselves before the pride of Louisburg Square. Because in an interview on an Australian chat show, Spielberg fumed, ``The Democratic Hollywood base, power base and money base really didn't come out this year and I was surprised about that.''
  • Detroit Democrat John Conyers is blogging at conyersblog.us
  • G8 Scientists are urging President Bush to act on global warming before it is too late.
  • The Star Tribune reports that Dick Cheney claims he doesn't understand Howard Dean's appeal:
    Howard Dean is "over the top,'' Vice President Dick Cheney says, calling the Democrats' chairman "not the kind of individual you want to have representing your political party.'' "I've never been able to understand his appeal. Maybe his mother loved him, but I've never met anybody who does. He's never won anything, as best I can tell,'' Cheney said in an interview to be aired Monday on Fox News Channel's "Hannity & Colmes.''
  • The liberal DailyKos blog had some controversy over a pie fight ad for The Real Gilligan's Island reality tv show.
  • Bloggerman reports that John Kerry has been amazed by the lack of media coverage of the Downing Street Memo.
    Last Wednesday, Senator John Kerry told the editorial board of the newspaper in New Bedford, Massachusetts, the "Standard-Times," that he was amazed at the lack of American media coverage of the so-called "Downing Street Memo" — notes of a July, 2002 British cabinet meeting that suggested the U.S. was making all the evidence fit a pre-planned invasion of Iraq.

    The words of the Democrats' 2004 standard-bearer?: "When I go back (to Washington) on Monday, I am going to raise the issue. I think (the memo) is a stunning, unbelievably simple and understandable statement of the truth..."
    Bloggerman also explains how some blogs and media outlets incorrectly interpreted John Kerry's statement as a call for impeachment.
  • Bob Woodward's new book about Watergate is due out next month. The original book about Deep Throat and Watergate, All the President's Men, is also popular again.

    Posted on June 10, 2005
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  • White House Edits Scientists' Global Warming Report

    It was the Pentagon that originally reported that global warming was the greatest threat facing the United States, not terrorism. That report had dire predictions of droughts, flooding and all kinds of disasters, all caused by global warming. It was an embarassment to the White House, and afterwards began to demand copies of those kinds of reports so they could edit the annoying parts out. Well, they've done it again. The New York Times reports that the guy who's been editing the official climate change reports prepared by actual scientists, is himself a former lobbyist for the oil industry. The reports were re-worded to play down any link between greenhouse gas emissions and global warming.
    In handwritten notes on drafts of several reports issued in 2002 and 2003, the official, Philip A. Cooney, removed or adjusted descriptions of climate research that government scientists and their supervisors, including some senior Bush administration officials, had already approved. In many cases, the changes appeared in the final reports.

    The dozens of changes, while sometimes as subtle as the insertion of the phrase "significant and fundamental" before the word "uncertainties," tend to produce an air of doubt about findings that most climate experts say are robust.

    Mr. Cooney is chief of staff for the White House Council on Environmental Quality, the office that helps devise and promote administration policies on environmental issues. Before going to the White House in 2001, he was the "climate team leader" and a lobbyist at the American Petroleum Institute, the largest trade group representing the interests of the oil industry. A lawyer with a bachelor's degree in economics, he has no scientific training[emphasis added].

    In one instance in an October 2002 draft of a regularly published summary of government climate research, "Our Changing Planet," Mr. Cooney amplified the sense of uncertainty by adding the word "extremely" to this sentence: "The attribution of the causes of biological and ecological changes to climate change or variability is extremely difficult." In a section on the need for research into how warming might change water availability and flooding, he crossed out a paragraph describing the projected reduction of mountain glaciers and snowpack. His note in the margins explained that this was "straying from research strategy into speculative findings/musings."
    Let's look at how one edit can totally change the meaning of a sentence.
    Mr. Cooney's alterations can cause clear shifts in meaning. For example, a sentence in the October 2002 draft of "Our Changing Planet" originally read, "Many scientific observations indicate that the Earth is undergoing a period of relatively rapid change." In a neat, compact hand, Mr. Cooney modified the sentence to read, "Many scientific observations point to the conclusion that the Earth may be undergoing a period of relatively rapid change." [emphasis added]
    There are many similar instances of a lobbyist flat-out changing conclusions reached by government scientists, in order to help out certain industries. Let the scientists be heard. It's up to the electorate to decide whether to ignore unpalatable facts -- not the government.

    Posted on June 8, 2005
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    U.S. Mayors Join Kyoto in Defiance of Bush

    Fed up with rising children's asthma rates and breathing polluted air, a bipartisan group of 132 U.S. mayors is defying President Bush and embracing the Kyoto Treaty on their own. The New York Times reports:
    Unsettled by a series of dry winters in this normally wet city, Mayor Greg Nickels has begun a nationwide effort to do something the Bush administration will not: carry out the Kyoto Protocol on global warming.

    Mayor Greg Nickels of Seattle formed a bipartisan coalition of mayors to adopt the Kyoto Protocol on global warming on the local level.

    Mr. Nickels, a Democrat, says 131 other likeminded mayors have joined a bipartisan coalition to fight global warming on the local level, in an implicit rejection of the administration's policy.

    The mayors, from cities as liberal as Los Angeles and as conservative as Hurst, Tex., represent nearly 29 million citizens in 35 states, according to Mayor Nickels's office. They are pledging to have their cities meet what would have been a binding requirement for the nation had the Bush administration not rejected the Kyoto Protocol: a reduction in heat-trapping gas emissions to levels 7 percent below those of 1990, by 2012.

    On Thursday, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg brought New York City into the coalition, the latest Republican mayor to join.
    The White House said it opposed the treaty because it would cost 5 million American jobs. But the mayors think otherwise. They say that global warming is threatening the water supply in California, and flooding could easily destroy New Orleans and that action must be taken now. They also say that reducing emissions actually creates jobs and economic growth.
    The coalition is not the first effort by local leaders to take up the initiative on climate change. California, under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, is moving to limit carbon dioxide emissions, and Gov. George A. Pataki of New York, also a Republican, has led efforts to reduce power plant emissions in the Northeast. But the coalition is unusual in its open embrace of an international agreement that the Bush administration has spurned, Mayor Nickels's office said, and is significant because cities are huge contributors to the nation's emission of heat-trapping gases.
    Global warming and polluted air are not partisan issues. They are issues for anyone that breathes. Reducing pollution just makes good economic sense. After all, think of how much we could save on healthcare if we had less asthma and lung disease to treat?

    Posted on May 14, 2005
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    Recycling and the Art of the Nervous Breakdown

    Think that recyling is too much bother? Too busy to sort your trash into two bags? If you lived in Kamikatsu, Japan, you might have some kind of nervous breakdown when faced with their draconian new trash-sorting laws. Two bags are for slackers! In Yokahama, trash must be sorted into 44 different categories. And properly labeled in the correct type of marker -- or else.
    When this city recently doubled the number of garbage categories to 10, it handed residents a 27-page booklet on how to sort their trash. Highlights included detailed instructions on 518 items. In Yokohama, trash that escapes recycling is put in transparent bags and loaded into trucks for incineration. Lipstick goes into burnables; lipstick tubes, "after the contents have been used up," into "small metals" or plastics. Take out your tape measure before tossing a kettle: under 12 inches, it goes into small metals, but over that it goes into bulky refuse.

    Socks? If only one, it is burnable; a pair goes into used cloth, though only if the socks "are not torn, and the left and right sock match." Throw neckties into used cloth, but only after they have been "washed and dried."

    "It was so hard at first," said Sumie Uchiki, 65, whose ward began wrestling with the 10 categories last October as part of an early trial. "We were just not used to it. I even needed to wear my reading glasses to sort out things correctly."

    To Americans struggling with sorting trash into a few categories, Japan may provide a foretaste of daily life to come. In a national drive to reduce waste and increase recycling, neighborhoods, office buildings, towns and megalopolises are raising the number of trash categories - sometimes to dizzying heights.

    Indeed, Yokohama, with 3.5 million people, appears slack compared with Kamikatsu, a town of 2,200 in the mountains of Shikoku, the smallest of Japan's four main islands. Not content with the 34 trash categories it defined four years ago as part of a major push to reduce waste, Kamikatsu has gradually raised the number to 44.
    So what's happening in Japan? Did someone with OCD get put in charge of the trash collection department? No, apparently they're simply drowning in trash and are literally running out of room to bury or burn it. The growing population in the U.S. has a price: an increasing volume of garbage. Conserving resources? Recyling trash into 44 neatly labeled categories? Trash police to monitor proper garbage disposal? Most people can barely get their taxes done and their water bill paid on time. I sense a bonanza for mental health professionals.

    Posted on May 11, 2005
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    Where Have All the Resources Gone?

    In a macabre counterpoint to the ANWR drilling disaster, The Guardian reports that two-thirds of world's resources are used up.
    The human race is living beyond its means. A report backed by 1,360 scientists from 95 countries--some of them world leaders in their fields--today warns that the almost two-thirds of the natural machinery that supports life on Earth is being degraded by human pressure.

    The study contains what its authors call "a stark warning" for the entire world. The wetlands, forests, savannahs, estuaries, coastal fisheries and other habitats that recycle air, water and nutrients for all living creatures are being irretrievably damaged. In effect, one species is now a hazard to the other 10 million or so on the planet, and to itself.

    "Human activity is putting such a strain on the natural functions of Earth that the ability of the planet's ecosystems to sustain future generations can no longer be taken for granted," it says.
    So, to sum up: we've got too many people who are using up all the fresh water, we're destroying the forests which are the lungs of the planet, we're overfishing the oceans when we're not dumping toxic waste in them and--oh yeah-- a year or so ago the Pentagon issued a report saying that global warming was a greater danger to Americans than terrorism.

    In the 70's people used to talk about population control. But that's a non-starter in today's America, where there's a growing movement by pharmacists to refuse to give women their lawfully-prescribed birth control prescriptions. A number of states actually are passing so-called "conscience laws" that allow pharmacists to refuse women access to their prescriptions that offend the pharmacist's moral or religious beliefs. So much for women's rights.

    Posted on March 30, 2005
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    Senate Votes to Allow Drilling in Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

    Well, this certainly has been a busy news day. The Senate voted 51-49 to allow drilling in the Artic National Wildlife Refuge, despite efforts by John Kerry, John McCain, Democrats and moderate Republicans' efforts to stop the measure being attached to the current budget bill. So, if the budget passes congress, there will be drilling by the end of the year--something that the oil companies have been campaigning for for twenty years now. Even they admit that the oil found will have no effect on current prices or supplies, since it will be at least ten years before we see one drop of oil. Of course, ANWR will be destroyed by then. Anyone who says differently has never seen a major oilfield up close during and after production, and doesn't know a thing about the oil business.

    Posted on March 16, 2005
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