Monday, January 07, 2019

If the federal judiciary is defunded because of Trump’s tantrum over the southern border that is effectively treason as is his falsification and exaggeration of facts to declare a national emergency otherwise known as a police state.

Treason!

This is exactly why Trump moved the goal post from $5 billion to $5.6 billion. Trump wants his dictatorship under a police state. State Attorney Generals need to be prepared to act against the federal government if there is a police state emergency declared.

The US House needs to be prepared to sue Trump for gross mismanagement of the USA government. There are three issues with Trump; impeachment with documentation from the Special Council; corruption currently in the federal courts and gross mismanagement of the federal government which is not a high crime or misdemeanor. The USA House has a right to sue for mismanagement that imperils the USA. To believe Trump’s emergency is about robbing the USA military to pay for his wall/fence is a fool’s errand. His emergency will have far reaching powers, INCLUDING censorship of media.

There has been no violence or Border Patrol dead or injured at the USA border or any detention facility. There is no emergency except the one Trump fabricates. There are no facts ONLY poor management and Trump’s own fear of his own shadow. The USA House can file suit as well as censure an incompetent president.

Yemen is a waste land while an uncertain military victory is raised as important above all other life.

January 6, 2018
By Eric Schmitt

Washington — An American airstrike in Yemen (click here) last week killed one of the suspected plotters of the deadly Qaeda bombing of the United States Navy destroyer Cole in 2000, President Trump and military officials confirmed on Sunday.

On Friday, the military’s Central Command said it had conducted a strike on Tuesday in the Marib Province of Yemen that targeted the militant, Jamal al-Badawi, but added that it was still assessing whether he had been killed. By Sunday, the military was confident that Mr. Badawi was dead, Capt. Bill Urban, a spokesman for the command, said in an email.

“Our GREAT MILITARY has delivered justice for the heroes lost and wounded in the cowardly attack on the USS Cole,” Mr. Trump tweeted on Sunday before flying to Camp David for meetings with White House staff. “We have just killed the leader of that attack, Jamal al-Badawi. Our work against al Qaeda continues. We will never stop in our fight against Radical Islamic Terrorism!”...

The people of Yemen are not considered as important if not more so than the bombs being dropped in a religious war that is causing death, disease and famine.

07 December 2018 - The Ministry of Public Health and Population of Yemen (click here) has reported 12 289 suspected cases and 10 associated deaths during epidemiological week 45 (5 – 11 November) in 2018. Of these, 13% are severe cases. The cumulative total number of suspected cholera cases from 01 January 2018 to 11 November 2018 is 280 198, with 372 associated deaths (CFR 0.13%). Children under five represent 32% of the total suspected cases while 22 out of 23 governorates and 306 out of 333 districts in Yemen have been affected. To date, out of 9398 stool samples collected during 2018, 2899 cases have been confirmed as cholera positive by culture at central public health laboratories. This reporting period, 39 stool samples from Amanat Al Asimah, Taizz and Sanaa were tested positive....

The United States of America has lost it's mind to tout the death of a PERHAPS terrorist while hundreds of thousands of innocent people suffer from disease and die with 32 percent of those suffering are children under 5 years old.

The death of one man is more important than the suffering of a nation of people. That is madness.


November 3, 2018


Malnourished Ferial Elias, 2, gestures as she is being weighed at a malnutrition treatment ward at al-Thawra hospital in Hodeidah, Yemen November 3, 2018.

London – Scientists have found that a strain of cholera causing an epidemic in Yemen (click here) – the worst in recorded history – came from eastern Africa and was probably borne into Yemen by migrants.
Using genomic sequencing techniques, researchers at Britain’s Wellcome Sanger Institute and France’s Institut Pasteur also said they should now be better able to estimate the risk of future cholera outbreaks in regions like Yemen, giving health authorities more time to intervene.
“Knowing how cholera moves globally gives us the opportunity to better prepare for future outbreaks,” said Nick Thomson, a professor at Sanger and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine who co-led the work.
Nearly four years of war between a Saudi-led coalition and the Iranian-aligned Houthi group have crippled healthcare and sanitation systems in Yemen, where some 1.2 million suspected cholera cases have been reported since 2017, with 2,515 deaths.
To explore the origins of the outbreak, Sanger and Pasteur team sequenced the genomes of cholera bacteria samples collected in Yemen and nearby areas.
They included samples from a Yemeni refugee center on the Saudi Arabia-Yemen border and 74 other cholera samples from South Asia, the Middle East and eastern and central Africa.
The team, whose findings were published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, then compared these sequences to a global collection of more than 1,000 cholera samples and found that the strain causing the Yemen epidemic is related to one first seen in 2012 in South Asia that has spread globally.
The Yemeni strain did not arrive directly from South Asia, but was circulating and causing outbreaks in eastern Africa in 2013-14.
"Morning Papers"

The Rooster

"Okeydoke"

7 January 2019
By Katy Scott

From the sinking city of Venice (click here) to the mass bleaching of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, climate change is drastically impacting some of the world's most treasured heritage sites.

To date, over 1,000 bucket-list locations have earned a spot on UNESCO's World Heritage list on account of their "outstanding universal value" to humanity.

But, if the world continues to warm -- driven predominately by human activity through greenhouse gas emissions -- many of these landmarks may lose some of those "outstanding" values or even cease to exist at all.

Perhaps the starkest example is Greenland's impressive Ilulissat Icefjord, a World Heritage site where the Sermeq Kujalleq glacier is literally melting before our eyes, partly because of global warming....

"Good Night, Moon"

New moon

1.1 days old

1.5 percent lit

While the "Super Bowl of Astronomy" is missing NASA; there is also an Aerospace Job Fair (click here) taking place in Seattle, the home of Boeing taking place as well. All this is happening because Trump wants a "campaign moment" at his State of the Union address at the end of January.

January 6, 2018
The world’s largest airborne observatory (click here) was supposed to be parked in Seattle this week, so thousands of scientists attending the “Super Bowl of Astronomy” could behold this marvel: a Boeing 747 with a massive telescope protruding from the back used to study the fundamental mysteries of the universe.

But conference-goers will not be able to see NASA’s space-exploring plane. Its visit to the 233rd Meeting of the American Astronomical Society was canceled, one of a growing list of scientific casualties of the partial government shutdown now stretching into its third week.

Along with the plane, hundreds of government scientists are also no longer allowed to attend the conference or two other major scientific gatherings scheduled to begin this week. Those meetings will address pressing issues in the fields of technology, space exploration, extreme weather and climate change.

But the shutdown’s impact on science stretches well beyond the empty chairs at this week’s conferences, said Keith Seitter, executive director of the American Meteorological Society. It means some of the nation’s smartest scientific minds are sitting at home, not doing science, for weeks, with no clear end in sight.

“That’s difficult to recover from,” said Seitter. “We’ll be seeing ripple effects from this for a long time.”...