Friday, August 31, 2018

The latest Snyder scapegoat is Nick Lyons.

Nick Lyons is the Michigan Health Director. He answers to the Governor. 

When it comes to Lyons involvement there needs to be a timeline to understand when the exposure of Legionnaires occurred and when Lyons became aware of that occurrence. If he had a flip attitude that is more than involuntary manslaughter. But, if he was involved in a cover up with Snyder, that is a different kettle of fish. 

So, while Lyons seems appropriate and should be investigated; this is rather late in the prosecutorial process to be looking at obvious responsible parties. I still don’t hear the name Snyder yet. Was Lyons consulted before the water was switched? When did he know the water was switched? 

See, a cabinet level health officer should be informed of many aspects of these radical economic strategies when human health hangs in the balance. Certainly, Director Lyons is concerned about clean water for all Michiganders, right? So, was he ever aware of the plans the Governor made for switching Flint’s water source and selling the pipeline connecting Detroit water to Flint?

See, that is another issue grossly overlooked. The pipeline connecting Detroit to Flint. Am I mistaken in my understanding that the pipeline when no longer needed by Flint in the judgement by the state was sold? It was sold. Why would anyone buy a pipeline that no one is going to use? UNLESS, Snyder knew from the beginning the pipeline after it was sold would be needed again. That is something no one has even questioned the Governor about.

One other thing. The involuntary manslaughter charges are about two of the Legionaries cases. When is the Michigan Health Director going to answer for the thousands of Flint children poisoned with lead?

I mean Snyder did discuss the lead poisoning with his health director, right?
In the long view it is probably better if Canada and the US don’t burden each other with a formal economic agreement. Canada is getting some degree of American immigration already. If the USA continues to fail its people there will be a much larger emigration to Canada.

It is the vast consumer base that gives the USA such clout in any trade relationship. Prime Minister Trudeau and his cabinet and legislators should prepare to have a larger population and far more economic clout than before. Americans have good work ethics. Canada will find their immigrants of value.
Trump has no legal degree. It is illegal for him to be involved with the US Justice Department. There is no reason to discuss it further.

The McCain family should know...

...a grateful nation always rises to the occasion and in this case I am seeing American flags being displayed in yards where they have never been before. They are there for one reason during these difficult days; in the memory of the American hero, John McCain.

Thursday, August 30, 2018

They are all climate deaths. Arizona. That is the state of Arizona. Okay? I think it needs drastically new leadership that can bring insight and reform to the state's focus.

I don't think anyone ever believed there were only 64 dead in Puerto Rico. I didn't believe it. No one I know believed it. No one thought Trump was doing a fantastic job either.

The hospitals had no electricity and then even more than a year later, the electricity failed again AFTER it was rebuilt. And there was no storm the size of Maria to create the failure either.


The USA has never been so disgraceful in the centuries of it's existence. Puerto Rico needs to be the 51st state. It will bring help and resolve to the people.



July 9, 2018
By Will Stone

Joey Azuela sits with his grandfather Sam Andazola in the hospital after Azuela suffered heatstroke while hiking in the Phoenix summer.

...More than 155 people died (click here) from heat-related causes in the Phoenix area last year, a new record in a place where the number of such deaths has been on the rise. Former Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton deemed it a public health crisis, and the city has launched an overhaul of how it prepares for and deals with extreme heat....

The US House and Senate have to address the climate. Americans are dying and that doesn't even include the deaths in Florida, either.

See, one of the things that follows the recognition of climate danger and deaths is reform. That means people like Joey knows the truth and protects from it RATHER THAN DENYING IT IS REAL!
So, the National Enquirer is in big financial trouble. Why should there be a surprise there? 

The former Senator John Edwards was viewed with hope for changing the "Two Americas." What was he met with? Exploitation of an affair. The entire episode was disgusting. There was no compassion for his wife and what she was going through and the American people lost a champion. I find it interesting that the "Two Americas" has never been more obvious today.

Murdoch's empire isn't in good condition either. They love their womanizing, don't they? 

Ron DeSantis is a racist. It hangs around his neck now like a millstone.

But, his attempt to divide the people of Florida was ended when Andrew Gillum's response was that of unify the electorate. I think Andrew Gillum will be a breath of fresh air for Florida as Governor. 

The Democrats have to get out the vote. Now is the time.

August 30, 2018
By Scott Powers

Andrew Gillum (click here) is breaking ahead of Ron DeSantis in the governor’s race, fueled by the early preference of Florida’s independent voters, according to the first publicly-released poll of the general election campaign season.

A new poll produced by Public Policy Polling gives Gillum, the progressive Tallahassee mayor who rocked the Democratic Party on Tuesday, 48 percent, and DeSantis, the conservative Republican nominee running with President Donald Trump, 43 percent, in the opening days of the Nov. 6 election campaign....
As I learn more about Senator John McCain with each ceremony held to celebrate his life, the more I realize how narcissistic the Palin nomination was. I could recite her children's name without a moment hesitancy. I knew she had a son in Iraq. What I didn't know was the personal life of John McCain and their continued dedication to this country. That is a shameful truth I think many people need to reflect on.

Joe Biden: I'm a Democrat and I love John McCain (click here for Salon article - thank you)

It is interesting the depth one learns exactly what a person was to others when that person passes away. I never knew Senator McCain had seven children. He was a dearly loved father. It appears all his sons are military men. Amazing. 

I wish his family peace as they struggle with his loss. It is a profound loss for the country as well.

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Trump continues to toy with a person's birth right. This is highly illegal. He is recalling American's birth certificate?

Trump is really beginning to sound like a Nazi. He just is. More detainees before deportation when they have a birth certificate that states he was born in Texas. This is a bridge too far. He is toying with the fact people are natural born citizens.

August 29, 2018
By Kevin Sieff

Pharr, Tex. On paper, he’s a devoted U.S. citizen. (click here)

His official American birth certificate shows he was delivered by a midwife in Brownsville, at the southern tip of Texas. He spent his life wearing American uniforms: three years as a private in the Army, then as a cadet in the Border Patrol and now as a state prison guard.

But when Juan, 40, applied to renew his U.S. passport this year, the government’s response floored him. In a letter, the State Department said it didn’t believe he was an American citizen

As he would later learn, Juan is one of a growing number of people whose official birth records show they were born in the United States but who are now being denied passports — their citizenship suddenly thrown into question. The Trump administration is accusing hundreds, and possibly thousands, of Hispanics along the border of using fraudulent birth certificates since they were babies, and it is undertaking a widespread crackdown on their citizenship....

27 August 2018
By Bethania Palma

Hundreds of migrant children (click here) separated from their parents under the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” immigration policy have yet to be reunited with their parents, according to attorneys representing the families.

Overall, a total of 2,654 children were taken from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border under the policy that began in April 2018 and was effectively ended in June 2018, when a federal judge issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) in a class action lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Judge Dana Sabraw ordered the policy be discontinued and families reunified.

As of a 24 August 2018 status conference in that case, 528 children remained in the care of the federal government and had not been reunified with their separated parents. Of those children, 343 were separated from a parent who has since been deported and is no longer in the U.S. Another 203 have been released from government custody to a U.S. sponsor (typically a family member, such as an aunt, grandparent, or the other parent). Those children have yet to be reunified with the parents from whom they were separated at the border, according to the ACLU.

In issuing the 26 June 2018 TRO, Judge Sabraw gave the federal government until 26 July 2018 to reunite all separated families. Despite the slow progress, he said during the 24 August status conference that it “seems we are on a very good trajectory here.”...

She and Trump are too extreme. They would seek to use the Senator's memory as an advantage.

Senator McCain and his family have far more dignity than either Palin or Trump could muster. The McCain family is correct, John McCain was never an extremist.

August 29, 2018
By Michael Burke
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (click here) (R) has reportedly not been invited to attend funeral services for Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), her onetime running mate.
NBC News reported Wednesday that Palin had not been invited. A source within the Palin family told NBC News that “out of respect to Senator McCain and his family we have nothing to add at this point.”...  s

Ms. Aretha Franklin is concluding her tour in the city she called home.

August 29, 2018
By Cheryl Corley

When Detroit celebrates the life of Aretha Franklin on Friday, there will be more than 100 pink Cadillacs lining the road in front of the church where her funeral will occur. It's a tribute to the Queen of Soul and one of her biggest, Grammy-winning hits.

"Freeway Of Love" is a joyous driving song. In its chorus, Franklin sings, "We're going riding on the freeway of love / In a pink Cadillac."...

I think he is exciting.

He is a fresh face, young and ambitious. That is a measure of success that people seem to like.

August 28, 2018
By Ray Downs

...Gillum, (click here) the Mayor of Tallahassee, will become the first black candidate of a major party to run for governor in the Sunshine State. The 39-year-old had been trailing in the polls for months behind former congresswoman Gwen Graham, whose father Bob Graham was a former governor and U.S. Senator of Florida, and Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine....

As Mayor has four primary areas of interest. (click here) Within each are programs and initiatives that serve the Tallahassee community.

Family First Agenda
The Opportunity Agenda
Talent Lives Here (TLH)
Promoting a Culturally Vibrant Community
Operation Safe Neighborhoods
As Mayor he oversaw a Fellowship Program

If there is anything Florida needs it is safer neighborhoods. He has what it takes.

May 22, 2018
By Karl Etters

...“Crime in Tallahassee (click here) is at its lowest level since 2013, and our city continues to get safer every day," Gillum said in a statement. "We will maintain a focus on investing in our human services, ensuring good jobs are available in our community, and providing our police officers with the resources they need to fight crime and continue this positive momentum.”...

I like him, a lot.

AI, the next unemployment statistic. Who is going to buy what they sell?

9 July 2018
By Peter Gearin

From her world of sophisticated data analytics (click here) Natalie Nguyen has seen just how traditional professions like accounting are set to transform as businesses scale faster and automate repetitive, time-consuming tasks.

The chief executive officer of Hyper Anna, an AI-powered data-analysis tool used by many of Australia's largest financial institutions, says accountants in this sort of augmented world will not be spending their days generating and maintaining reports. Instead, the focus will be on improved customer service and compliance reporting as data analytics helps solve complex problems at lightning speed.

"If we're looking ahead two years, we see accounting roles will be more focused on planning, risk management, capital management and performance monitoring," Nguyen says. "They will spend less time doing all the manual tasks and a lot more time interpreting the information and understanding what it means for the business.

“They will be using their experience to make the right decisions and make ethical judgements. These [tasks] are not going to be replaced by machines any time soon."

In a recent survey undertaken by business software group Sage about half of the 3000 respondents said they would like to automate their number crunching, data entry, email and diary management jobs. The study found two-thirds saying they would invest in AI to automate low level tasks while a slight majority (55 per cent) expect to be using some form of AI within three years....

It is better if peacekeepers were sent along with significant amounts of humanitarian aid. Such actions are prudent to international stability.

War is not necessary and only makes it worse. Most countries can solve their own problems if given a chance to survive the emergencies.

29 August 2018
By Mitra Taj

Lima: Peru has declared a 60-day health emergency (click here) in two provinces on its northern border, citing "imminent danger" to health and sanitation, as a regional crisis sparked by thousands of Venezuelans fleeing economic collapse escalated on Tuesday.

The decree, published in the government's official gazette, did not give more details on the risks, but health authorities have previously expressed concerns about the spread of diseases such as measles and malaria from migrants.

Meanwhile, Brazil was sending armed forces to keep order near the Venezuelan border area, in the state of Roraima.

The exodus of Venezuelans to other South American countries is building toward a "crisis moment" comparable to events involving refugees in the Mediterranean, the United Nations said this week....

LGBTQ rights are questionable in Australia. Or, is it the noble whistleblower part they disdain?

29 August 2018
By Jenny Noyes and Ben Grubb

American whistleblower (click here) and activist Chelsea Manning is facing the prospect of having her visa application denied by the Australian government just days before her speaking tour – which includes an appearance at the Sydney Opera House – is due to start.

Fairfax Media understands the Australian government is considering refusing entry to Manning, who was released from military prison in 2017, under s501 of the Migration Act....

It is a loyalty thing. A profound burden for Trump when those surrounding him speak the truth.

30 August 2018
By Shannon Pettypiece

White House counsel Don McGahn (click here) will leave his job after the Senate votes on the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh for the Supreme Court, President Donald Trump confirmed on Wednesday.

The development comes as legal risks to the President rise, following the conviction of his former campaign chairman Paul Manafort last week on fraud charges and his former personal lawyer Michael Cohen's guilty plea to charges of fraud and campaign finance violations....

...During his time as White House counsel, McGahn repeatedly butted heads with Trump and occupied a position rife with conflicts. He has met extensively with special counsel Robert Mueller's team in its investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election, and is an important potential witness regarding whether Trump obstructed justice when he fired FBI director James Comey....

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

To understand why Trump wants to fire AG Sessions, ask who his replacement would be and what the political value is and don’t leave out the loyalty oath.

I can’t think of one replacement for AG Sessions that does not bring more corruption to the Trump White House. Trump wants the AG to conduct all the defense of the President. Recently Trump even criticized McGhan.

He wants prosecutorial powers at his finger tips to reek havoc and distract from all his problems. He wants to sue for any negative comment by anyone. He wants the powers of the AG for that purpose. 

Trump doesn’t care about the work Sessions conducts for the country. He wants every person in US Justice working on his problems and carrying out retribution. 

What is Jeff Sessions doing that is inappropriate? Trump thinks all the work Jeff Sessions does is inappropriate because Sessions is not doing what Trump wants. Trump wants the country to fear him. He doesn’t care how he achieves that.
27 August 2018
By Carla Green

California’s summer (click here) of deadly wildfires and dangerous heatwaves will soon be the new normal if nothing is done to stop climate change, a report released on Monday warns.


City heatwaves could lead to two to three times as many deaths by 2050, the report says. By 2100, without a reduction in emissions, the state could see a 77% increase in the average area burned by wildfires. The report also warns of erosion of up to 67% of its famous coastline, up to an 8.8F (4.9C) rise in average maximum temperatures, and billions of dollars in damages....


...Rising temperaturescould lead to up to 11,300 additional deaths in 2050, the report says, and the overall number of days marked by extreme heat will “increase exponentially in many areas”.
The effects of those extreme heat days will probably weigh most heavily on the state’s most vulnerable residents, including the more than 100,000 people who are homeless in California, many of whom live on the streets without reliable access to fans, air conditioners, or running water.

“The 2006 heatwave killed over 600 people, resulted in 16,000 emergency department visits, and led to nearly $5.4bn in damages,” the assessment reports. “The human cost of these events is already immense, but research suggests that mortality risk for those 65 or older could increase tenfold by the 2090s because of climate change.”...


Background checks are EFFECTIVELY defunded by the US Department of Justice.

If the background checks can be accomplished in three days because of cuts in funding that don't allow fully staffed offices, then the background check system is effectively defunded.

August 27, 2018
By Bill Hutchinson

..."The suspect clearly targeted other gamers (click here) that were in a back room at the Chicago Pizza participating in this gaming tournament," Jacksonville Sheriff Mike Williams said of Katz at a news conference Monday afternoon. "The suspect walked passed patrons who were in other parts of the business and focused his attention on the gamers."

Meanwhile, court records obtained by ABC News in Baltimore from a divorce and child custody battle between Katz's parents show that Katz was treated in 2011 for mental health issues and that his mother informed the court that her son was suffering from depression and "affective disorders." Records also show that David Katz was once prescribed the antidepressants Risperdal and Fluoxetine....

February 12, 2018

Washington, DC — Today, Giffords, (click here) the gun violence prevention organization founded by former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and Navy combat veteran and NASA astronaut Captain Mark Kelly, responded to President Trump’s budget announcement, which includes a 16% cut to grants for states to upload prohibiting records to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), the databases that allow gun dealers to quickly ascertain whether a potential purchaser falls into a prohibited category before going through with a gun sale. National Criminal History Improvement Program (NCHIP) and NICS Act Record Improvement Program (NARIP) grants are critical funding sources that have proven instrumental to states’ ability to report prohibiting records to NICS, particularly prohibiting domestic violence records. The FY 2017 omnibus funded these programs at $73 million. President Trump’s proposed budget cut funding for FY 2019 down to $61 million....     

Monday, August 27, 2018

Why was the criticism even necessary?

May Senator John McCain rest in peace.

August 27, 2018
By Erin Kelly

Veterans groups on Monday (click here) criticized President Trump, saying he should show greater respect for the late Sen. John McCain by flying the White House flags at half-staff through his burial and issuing a presidential proclamation in honor of the Vietnam War hero.

"The American Legion urges the White House to follow long-established protocol following the death of prominent government officials," American Legion National Commander Denise Rohan wrote in a letter to Trump.

After flying the flags at half-staff on Saturday and Sunday, the White House broke with tradition and resumed flying its flags at full-staff on Monday morning, even though McCain's final memorial service will not take place until this coming weekend.

Later on Monday, after criticism poured in from veterans groups and others, the flags were again lowered to half staff at the White House...
August 27, 2018
By Eric Levenson and Keith Allen

A federal judge in Seattle (click here) granted a motion for a preliminary injunction on Monday that blocks a Texas man from releasing downloadable blueprints for 3D-printed guns until the litigation is resolved, according to court documents obtained by CNN.

Judge Robert S. Lasnik of the US District Court for Western Washington extended an earlier temporary restraining order, which will remain in place until the case is resolved, the court documents state.

"The court finds that the irreparable burdens on the private defendants' First Amendment rights are dwarfed by the irreparable harms the states are likely to suffer if the existing restrictions are withdrawn and that, overall, the public interest strongly supports maintaining the status quo through the pendency of this litigation," Lasnik wrote in the ruling....

"Good Night, Moon"

The Full

15.2 days old moon

99.8% lit

August 26, 2018
By Rachel E. Greenspan

United States residents who missed the partial solar eclipse on Aug. 11 have another chance to see something wild in the sky this month. The August full moon — dubbed the “green corn moon,” the “grain moon,” the “red moon” and the “sturgeon moon” — will be visible in the sky soon.

The full moon reached its full phase on Sunday morning, according to space.com, which means the full moon will be visible about 24 minutes after sunset on Sunday, Aug. 26.

A full moon is often visible 24 hours before and after its peak, so stargazers may be able to catch a glimpse on Monday night, too.

Sunday, August 26, 2018

What is there to say? We are losing the battle. Is the war over?

Daily CO2

March 30, 2018

Based (click here) on the most recent research, (Lithuanian people are the happiest people in the Baltic States. We have also taken an interest in other research that analyses the feeling of happiness in individual areas: where we are superior to other Europeans and where we lag behind. But, most importantly, do appreciate what we have.

Unemployment and education The unemployment rate of the population with higher education is among the lowest in Europe (about 3%). In this respect, we are comparable to such countries as The Netherlands or the United Kingdom. Within the group of population with lower education, the situation is worse. It should be taken into account that this share is the smallest in Europe.

According to Eurostat data for the fourth quarter of 2017, about 15% of the population with education lower than secondary fail to find a job, while among those with secondary education this share is 9%. Such a gap among residents with a different education, unfortunately, is one of the widest in Europe. While the situation has been improving, it is particularly important to properly integrate residents with lower education into the labour market....

Long before the extremes of the Climate Crisis was being observed the worries were being garnered.

Temperature and distribution of plant species
By FI Woodward, Department of Botany, University of Cambridge, UK
Symposia of the Society for Experimental Biology, 1988, 42:59-75

Abstract

An understanding of the mechanisms (click here) by which temperature influences the distribution of species and vegetation has been attempted by modelling population growth and establishing those stages of the plant life cycle which, when diminished by extremes of temperature, for example, may have the greatest impact on plant survival. This analysis suggests that the heat sum of the growing season, measured as day-degrees, controls the distribution of annual vegetation. For perennial vegetation both the heat sum of the growing season and the annual, absolute minimum temperature are critical. Climatic correlations and experimental analyses indicate that, in northern Europe, the northern latitudinal and upper altitudinal limits of lowland and southern vegetation are directly controlled by climate. In contrast, the southern and lower altitudinal limits of upland and northern vegetation are likely to be controlled by temperature-sensitive competition with southern or lowland species. Many of the temperature-sensitive processes of plant growth and development, such as the non-linearity of extension growth and variations in the threshold temperatures of processes, may increase the realized heat sum at a particular geographical location. However, in more northerly climates, photoperiodic control is crucial in avoiding precocious development in the highly variable climatic conditions of early spring.
Figure 1
Extensive (click here) and transient metabolic reprogramming in chloroplasts under heat stress. Major events of metabolic reprogramming in response to heat stress include chlorophyll breakdown, generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), antioxidant defense, protein turnover, and metabolic alterations with carbon assimilation. With respect to the systemic acquired acclimation to heat stress in plants, diverse metabolic reprogramming in chloroplasts is required for optimizing plant growth and development during high temperature stresses.
June 29, 2016
By Bob Silberg

...“There are places in the world where, (click here) for these important breadbasket crops, they are already close to a thermal limit for that crop species,” Schimel said. Adding to the burden, he said, “this analysis (the EGU study) does not take into account the fact that pests and pathogens may spread more rapidly at higher temperatures.”
And Schimel pointed out that heat can imperil agriculture even when crops don’t die. “If you get really high temperatures or very dry conditions during critical parts of the development of the crop, it produces essentially no grain. For example, above certain temperature thresholds, corn doesn't die but it doesn't grow seed. It doesn't grow a corncob. And other crops are similar to that, where the development of the actual food part of the crop is dramatically inhibited above critical temperatures.”
But what about that fertilization effect from carbon dioxide? “It does help a bit, but it doesn't make the underlying problem go away,” he said. “And by the way, if the plant was growing really fast when it died, it still died.”
Can we avoid the extra half-percent temperature increase? Schimel agrees that we should try hard to do so, but cautions that we don’t know how to fine-tune global warming with that much precision. “If we aim for 2 degrees, we might hit 3 degrees,” he said. “If we aim for 1.5 degrees, we might still hit 2 degrees.”
The average Lithuanian (click here) is richer than 83% people in the world. He or she earns more than an average person in every nation of Africa, Latin America and most of the countries in Asia. However, Lithuania is lagging behind countries like those of Western Europe, the United States, Canada, Japan or Australia.
Lithuania is a post-industrial society (click here) with some two-thirds of the population working in the service sector. The society is relatively egalitarian with healthcare, primary and secondary education being funded by the state. Undergraduate, graduate, and postgraduate education is also state-funded for the better students.
However, corruption is a major problem in the healthcare sector as many doctors expect bribes to be paid to them by patients so that they would receive preferential treatment. Corruption is rampant in other sections of the society as well, especially traffic police and government purchases (e.g. road construction for taxpayers' money). These practices are largely a legacy of the Soviet regime. However, Transparency International places Lithuania at some 50th place of 182 countries in its Corruption Perception Index (the higher the place - the less corruption there is), ahead of all states formerly behind the Iron Curtain save for Estonia and Poland (but far behind the West, Japan or Australia).
The largest employer in Lithuania is the MAXIMA group that owns a chain of retail shops well visible in Lithuania as well as Latvia, Estonia, and Bulgaria. This is the largest company in Lithuania and its owner Nerijus Numavičius is the country‘s richest person. Just like many Lithuanian businesses MAXIMA is primarily owned by a single person (or a single family) rather than being a publically traded company.
Largest industries in Lithuania are oil refinement (Mažeikių Nafta in Mažeikiai; 36,2% of total 2011 exports) and fertilizer manufacturing (Lifosa in Kėdainiai and Achema in Jonava; 8,9% of exports). Processed and unprocessed food amount for 16,9% of exports. Traditionally strong clothing industry has been hit by outsourcing to Asia.
The agricultural sector now employs only some 12 percent of the population but they are good at lobbying. Therefore the government generally subsidizes agriculture. The European Union adds to this although the European Union subsidies are significantly lower than for farmers in countries like France. Typically Lithuanian farmers grow grain, pigs, chicken, and cows. The "traditional agriculture" where a family owns a single cow, a single pig and some pastures (rather than combining land to form a large business) is declining but still well entrenched in the Lithuanian countryside. Village tourism offers a new opportunity for Lithuanian farmers and tourists alike.

No more pipelines!

August 24, 2018
By Randy Billings

A federal court (click here) ruled Friday that a South Portland ordinance prohibiting bulk loading of crude oil onto tankers does not violate the U.S. Constitution.

The decision is a blow to Portland Pipe Line Corp., which challenged the city’s “Clear Skies” ordinance on grounds that it violated the Dormant Commerce and the Foreign Commerce clauses of the U.S. Constitution, which gives Congress sole power to regulate foreign and interstate trade.

The ordinance effectively blocked the company from reversing the flow of its 236-mile underground pipeline that has carried foreign crude from harbor terminals in South Portland to refineries in Montreal since World War II.

The South Portland City Council banned bulk loading of crude oil on the city’s waterfront in 2014, just as production of controversial tar sands oil was taking off in western Canada and demand for foreign crude began to dwindle.

Mayor Linda Cohen praised the ruling in a written statement.

“Faced with the prospect of hundreds of thousands of barrels of crude oil being loaded onto marine tank vessels in the city and threatening the health of the residents and preventing redevelopment of the waterfront, the City Council prohibited this new activity,” Cohen said. “We are pleased that the court upheld the ordinance.”...

Lithuania has a consistent footprint after reducing it from over 6.0 in 1990.

Lithuania (click here) does better than average compared to other participants in climate policy. It is fourth from the top of this list from 2014.

CO2 emissions (click here) (metric tons per capita) in Lithuania was reported at 4.3781 in 2014, according to the World Bank collection of development indicators, compiled from officially recognized sources.
August 20, 2018

Dalian -- Typhoon Rumbia (click here) brought heavy rain to the northeastern Chinese port city of Dalian, forcing the evacuation of 14,573 residents from disaster-prone regions.

Torrential rains hit on Sunday night and the city's meteorological center issued red alerts for the rainstorms Monday morning.

Precipitation in urban areas ranged from 50 to 70 mm in a 90-minute period.

Earlier rains saturated the soil and the latest rainstorm could trigger flooding and urban waterlogging. Local authorities on Sunday ordered closing scenic areas along the coast, rivers, and in the mountains.

Meanwhile, local education authorities ordered kindergartens, and education and training institutions to halt classes on Monday.

Twenty-one rescue teams of 1,960 people have been put on standby for potential disaster relief.

2,873,967 Lithuanians in their homeland.

Interestingly, (click here) native inhabitants of Lithuania have never been replaced or pushed out by any other ethnic group since the Neolithic period. This means modern-day Lithuanians have much of the same genetic composition of their ancestors. Lithuania has a fairly homogeneous population with no apparent genetic differences between subgroups of ethnicities. A DNA analysis conducted in 2004 found that Lithuanians are closest to Finns, Estonians and Latvians.
Ethnic Lithuanians account for 5/6 of the population, which makes the country one of the most homogeneous in the Baltic States. The 2011 census found that 84% of the population was ethnic Lithuanians who spoke Lithuanian. Poles made up 6.6%, followed by Russians (5.8%), Belarusians (1.2%) and Ukranians (0.5%).
Poles are mostly concentrated in southeast Lithuania, while Russians are mostly in Vilnius and Klaipeda. There are approximately 3,000 Roma in Lithuania, as well as a small community of Tatar.
August 17, 2018

In total there are four (click here) ancient irrigation systems in China dedicated as World Heritage Status.

The Jiangxiyan Irrigation System in Longyou county, Zhejiang province (click here) gets world heritage status on Aug 14.

The Jiangxiyan Irrigation System in Longyou county of Quzhou, Zhejiang province was recognized as a Heritage Irrigation Structure (HIS) by the International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage (ICID) in Saskatoon, Canada on Aug 14.

The announcement was made at the 2018 International Conference and 69th International Executive Council Meeting of the ICID. Four irrigation sites in China - the Dujiangyan Irrigation System, the Lingqu Canal, the Jiangxiyan Irrigation System and the Changqu Canal – were included on the 2018 list of HIS.

The Jiangxiyan, or the Jiang-Xi Dam, located over Lingshan River in Longyou county, was built 680 years ago. It consists of the Jiang and Xi dams which serve the purposes of irrigation, water supply and drainage, water transport and hydraulic applications. The system is still in use today.

The award of HIS has been given by the ICID since 2014 for the purpose of protecting, exploring and promoting the ancient irrigation systems and their scientific value. Every year, the commission receives applications from around the world and announces a list of new structures after strict evaluation.

Lithuania values the future for their people.

Palanga, Lithuania

This country profile (click here) contains key data on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, renewable energy and energy efficiency for each EU Member State (MS). This profile is part of a package of country profiles that support and complement the EEA publicantion 'Trends adn projections in Europe 2017 - Tracking progress towards Europe's climate and energy targets.'...

On the sixth page of Lithuania's report it is easily noted the country has made
exceptional progress on greenhouse gas emissions, especially in the energy sector.

What is even more impressive is the land use, land use changes and forestry
actually have a negative emission that contributes to the overall effectiveness of
Lithuania's greenhouse gas strategy. Magnificent. Thank you.




July 23, 2018

Today, Representative Carlos Curbelo (FL-26), (click here) co-chair and co-founder of the House Climate Solutions Caucus, joined the Columbia University Center for Global Energy Policy to discuss the introduction of his new legislation to fight carbon emission and fund infrastructure.

H.R. 6463, the Modernizing America with Rebuilding to Kick-start the Economy of the Twenty-first Century with a Historic Infrastructure-Centered Expansion Act, or the MARKET CHOICE Act, would:

Set the United States on a path to reduce carbon emissions and not only fulfill, but exceed the commitments set out under the Paris agreement;

- Raise much-needed revenue to modernize our national infrastructure – a bipartisan priority that remains elusive without a new influx of revenue – by providing an additional $285 billion for the Highway Trust Fund and $18 billion for the Airways Trust Fund;

- Eliminate regressive, inefficient and discriminatory taxes like the gasoline tax and the aviation fuel tax to promote equitable treatment for Americans driving traditional cars and ensures all Americans are contributing their fair share to our country's infrastructure needs;

- Create long-term regulation stability by establishing a moratorium on the EPA from finalizing and enforcing Clean Air Act regulations on greenhouse gas emissions – thus providing much-needed regulatory certainty for utilities and businesses and limiting economic repercussions of additional regulations;

- Hold trade partners accountable by way of a border tax adjustment, protecting American exporters competitiveness abroad; and

- Protect lower income Americans from higher utility bills and assist displaced workers.