By Hank Winchester
This Blog is created to stress the importance of Peace as an environmental directive. “I never give them hell. I just tell the truth and they think it’s hell.” – Harry Truman (I receive no compensation from any entry on this blog.)
Friday, April 23, 2021
The criminal hearings are coming up.
By Hank Winchester
The dam broke.
By Margaret Bauman
After weeks of stoking fears of a large-scale invasion of Ukraine, (click here) Russia on April 22 announced the withdrawal of military forces from areas bordering Ukraine....
By Anne Applebaum
...So far, (click here) the only person who has a coherent strategy for dealing with Putin is Navalny. He described it in a handwritten note he sent to Yevgenia Albats, a Russian journalist and close friend. “Everything will be all right,” he told her. “And, even if it isn’t, we’ll have the consolation of having lived honest lives.” He has already shown his compatriots that it is possible to live an honest life in a dishonest political system. It’s an invitation for others to follow. Dictatorships survive because most people are not willing to pay that high a price.
By Matt Clinch and Holly Ellyatt
Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny (click here) said Friday he will start to end the hunger strike he began on March 31.
Via his Instagram account, Navalny said it would take him 24 days to gradually end the strike, but said he was still demanding to see a doctor of his own choice. He also thanked the “good people” of Russia and around the world for their support, according to a Reuters translation.
Navalny, one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s most vocal critics in recent years, was transferred to a prison hospital on April 19, three weeks into a hunger strike. He had been protesting against his treatment in prison, saying he had been denied urgent medical treatment....
Thursday, April 22, 2021
One of the saddest places on Earth right now is the Bering Sea.
Credit: W. Meier, National Snow and Ice Data Center
May 7, 2018
The Bering Sea is losing ice fast. (click here)
When it comes to climate change, there are some signs that seem impossible to ignore—disappearing Arctic sea ice, for example. Loss of sea ice in the Bering Sea, which connects to the Arctic through the Bering Strait, is another.
Back in February, nearly half of the Bering Sea ice melted in two week’s time, and it only became worse after that. New numbers are showing that by the end of April it was just under 10 percent of normal levels. For comparison, NASA’s Earth Observatory reports that there should be “more than 500,000 square kilometers of ice”—in 2013 there was 679,606 square kilometers by this time of the year—and yet this year it is nearly gone (61,704 square kilometers).
Additionally, “the ice extent over the Chukchi Sea, just north of the Bering Sea abutting Alaska’s northwest coast, is also abnormally depleted. It recently began its melt season earlier than ever before measured.”...
In October 2016, (click here) a tiny island in the frigid waters between Russia and Alaska was the site of a morbid mystery. Dozens of dead seabirds began suddenly washing up on the shore. The bodies continued to arrive for months.
It was a jolt to the local residents of St. Paul Island, northernmost of a group of four volcanic formations known as the Pribilof Islands, clustered in the icy Bering Sea. While dead animals might occasionally wash up under normal circumstances, the daily bombardments of sodden carcasses were clearly the mark of a mass die-off. More remarkably, most of the birds were tufted puffins, a species that rarely washes up dead on the island at all.
Perhaps most disturbingly of all were the birds’ emaciated bodies; they likely starved to death....
...More than 300 carcasses were recovered on the shoreline. Using their simulations, however, the researchers estimate that anywhere from 3,150 to 8,800 birds likely died in the event. Most of them were probably puffins.
Analyses on a handful of the bodies found that toxins, often the suspected culprit in mass animal die-offs, were not to blame. Instead, it appeared most of the birds starved to death. Many of them were molting, the researchers note—an energy-intensive process that can make birds more vulnerable to stressors like food shortages.
The food stress itself is likely being driven by changes in the Arctic related to global warming, scientists say....
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
Elon Musk needs to get his head out of the crytocurrency cloud and back down to Earth.
By Will Daniel
Tesla stock (click here) sank as much as 6.5% on Monday after reports of a fatal driverless car crash outside of Houston, Texas stirred investors.
Two men died on Saturday night when a 2019 Tesla Model S driving at high speed failed to negotiate a curve on a windy road in Spring, Texas.
Harris County Precinct 4 Constable Mark Herman said in an interview that, based on a preliminary investigation, there was no evidence anyone was at the wheel of the vehicle at the time of the crash.
"Our preliminary investigation is determining-but it's not complete yet-that there was no one at the wheel of that vehicle. We're almost 99.9% sure," the constable said, per the Wall Street Journal.
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
Monday, April 19, 2021
Capital Police Officer Brian Sicknick did not die in a vacuum.
US Capitol protests (click here) Paramedics perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation on a patient on January 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C. Demonstrators breeched security and entered the US Capitol in Washington, DC, as Congress debated the a 2020 presidential election Electoral Vote Certification.
First responders were triaging the victims of the insurrection on Capitol grounds.
Other people died that night and they died due to the same stress facing Capitol Officer Brian Sicknick. He died of natural causes under duress. He was faced with circumstances none of the police was expecting. The Capitol Police were told to "Hold Back" on the response to the insurrection. The police never was prepared through the chain of command. Basically, they were on their own to maintain order.
Capitol Officer Brian Sicknick was overwhelmed by leadership that took orders from madmen. Capitol Officer Sicknick died on active duty while protecting US Senators and US Representatives. He did not fail them.
April 13, 2021By Luke Broadwater
Washington - The Capitol Police had clearer advance warnings (click here) about the Jan. 6 attack than were previously known, including the potential for violence in which “Congress itself is the target.” But officers were instructed by their leaders not to use their most aggressive tactics to hold off the mob, according to a scathing new report by the agency’s internal investigator.
In a 104-page document, the inspector general, Michael A. Bolton, criticized the way the Capitol Police prepared for and responded to the mob violence on Jan. 6. The report was reviewed by The New York Times and will be the subject of a Capitol Hill hearing on Thursday.
Mr. Bolton found that the agency’s leaders failed to adequately prepare despite explicit warnings that pro-Trump extremists posed a threat to law enforcement and civilians and that the police used defective protective equipment. He also found that the leaders ordered their Civil Disturbance Unit to refrain from using its most powerful crowd-control tools — like stun grenades — to put down the onslaught.
The report offers the most devastating account to date of the lapses and miscalculations around the most violent attack on the Capitol in two centuries....
April 19, 2021
By Adam Goldman
The determination likely complicates the Justice Department’s efforts to prosecute anyone in the death of Mr. Sicknick, 42; two men have been charged with assaulting him by spraying an unknown chemical on him outside the Capitol.
But the autopsy found no evidence that Officer Sicknick had an allergic reaction to chemicals nor of any internal or external injuries, the medical examiner, Dr. Francisco J. Diaz, told The Washington Post, which first reported his finding.
Still, Dr. Diaz added of the riot, “All that transpired played a role in his condition.”...
"Good Night, Moon"
The waxing crescent tonight
6.8 day old moon
43.4 percent lit
17 April 2021By Richard Luscombe
Nasa has chosen SpaceX (click here) to build the next-generation spacecraft that will return humans to the moon, further strengthening Elon Musk’s grip on the burgeoning public-private space industry.
The $2.9bn contract to build the lunar lander that will spearhead the Artemis program, Nasa’s ambitious project to return to the moon for the first time since the final Apollo mission in 1972, was announced on Friday.
“The Artemis lunar landing is a key piece to our moon-to-Mars strategy,” Steve Jurczyk, acting Nasa administrator, told reporters. “Today is a big step forward. This is an incredible time to be involved in human exploration for all humanity.”
Musk’s company is currently the only operation with the capability of launching astronauts from US soil. But Nasa’s decision to go with a sole contractor for its human landing system (HLS) raised eyebrows.
Traditionally, the agency has preferred to stimulate competition and protect against setbacks by keeping at least two contractors on the payroll....
Putin is a troubled man. He is instituting silence in order to maintain power and justify war.
By Anna Chernova and Ivana Kottasová
President Biden is Catholic.
By Catholic News Service
Hong Kong - Catholic media tycoon and philanthropist Jimmy Lai (click here) has been sentenced to 12 months in jail after being found guilty of unauthorised assembly.
Ucanews.com reported he was among nine activists in court on April 16 who earlier were found guilty of charges relating to pro-democracy demonstrations in the Chinese territory.
Lai, 73, has donated millions of dollars to Catholic causes and has been the biggest financial backer of Cardinal Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, retired archbishop of Hong Kong, ucanews.com reported.
He made his fortune through mid-market fashion chain Giordano before putting his wealth into NextDigital and the city’s leading anti-Beijing newspaper, Apple Daily.
Lai’s jailing comes as the Chinese Communist Party intensifies its crackdown on Hong Kong’s rights and freedoms.
In mid-April, Apple Daily published a handwritten letter by Lai, sent from prison, which read: “It is our responsibility as journalists to seek justice. As long as we are not blinded by unjust temptations, as long as we do not let evil get its way through us, we are fulfilling our responsibility.”
Speaking to the BBC before the hearing, Lai said that even if he were to be imprisoned, he would still be “living my life meaningfully”.
“I came here with one dollar. I got everything I have because of this place. If this is the payback time, this is my redemption,” he said.
Lai, who was born in mainland China but was smuggled into Hong Kong as a child, faced eight charges in court, two of which were imposed under the new national security law and can carry a maximum term of life in prison....
Typhoon Surigae is now a Super Typhoon. It could boomerang back into the north Pacific.
By Taylor Ward
Prisoner release in Myanmar.
By the Associated Press
Yangon, Myanmar - Myanmar's junta on Saturday released more than 23,000 prisoners (click here) to mark the traditional new year holiday, including at least three political detainees, and the military leader behind the February coup confirmed he would attend a regional summit later this month.
It wasn't immediately clear if those released included pro-democracy activists who were detained for protesting the coup. State broadcaster MRTV said that junta chief Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing had pardoned 23,047 prisoners, including 137 foreigners who will be deported from Myanmar. He also reduced sentences for others.
As security forces continued the deadly crackdown, unconfirmed but credible accounts with photos on social media said that three people were killed Saturday in the central city of Mogok, in Myanmar's gem mining region.
According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, which monitors casualties and arrests, government forces have killed at least 728 protesters and bystanders since the takeover. The group says 3,141 people, including ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, are in detention.
Among those released Saturday from Yangon's Insein Prison were at least three political prisoners who were jailed in 2019. They are members of the Peacock Generation performing troupe who were arrested during that year's new year celebrations for skits that poked fun at military representatives in Parliament and military involvement in business....
Ask Republicans if they know how to spell "Thwaites Glacier." Ask them.
By the University of Gothenburg
It is inviolation of International Law to destroy a man's life for the purpose of politics.
By Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber
Navalny, a fierce opponent of Russian President Vladimir Putin, started refusing food on March 31 in protest at what he said was the refusal of prison authorities to provide him with proper medical care for acute back and leg pain.
Prison authorities say they have offered Navalny proper medical care but that the 44-year-old opposition politician has refused it and insisted on being treated by a doctor of his choice from outside the facility, a request they have declined.
"Allow a doctor to see my dad," Navalny's daughter Dasha, a student at Stanford University, wrote on Twitter.
A medical trade union with ties to Navalny said on Saturday he was in critical condition, citing medical tests that it said showed that Navalny's kidneys could soon fail, which could lead to cardiac arrest....
Ask Republicans if they can say, "sea-level rise" and "melting glaciers." Seriously. Ask them. They can't even say it, yet alone govern for it.
By Durham University
Putin knows his time is up with the unrest of the Russian people.
By Illia Ponomarenko
In spite of what the Kremlin says, (click here) Ukraine has no plans for any offensive actions in Russian-occupied Donbas, the country’s top military commander, Colonel General Ruslan Khomchak, said on April 9.
Ukraine remains committed to a diplomatic solution to the conflict, he added.
Khomchak made his statement amid the worst regional security situation in years. Russia has been spotted concentrating major military assets near the Ukrainian border since late March, putting Kyiv and the West on high alert.
Russia accused Ukraine of preparing an all-out attack against Russian-backed militants in the east. According to Kremlin officials, this would give Moscow the excuse to intervene, ostensibly to protect the civilian population....
ANY ice melt from the Greenland Ice Sheet in excess of recharge is sea level rise.
By Bill Whitaker
"What I'm standing on is a huge block of ice that split off from the glacier recently and dropped into the sea," Pelley reported. "It's a big iceberg at this point. This part of Greenland is melting faster than just about any other. And to get a sense of the enormity of what's happening, consider this: The ice that is melting here is the equivalent of all of the ice in the Alps."
There are technology in Iceland (posted on this blog) to remove CARBON from the troposphere and create a carbon solid.
Human activity is now leading to the equivalent of 40 billion tons of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere each year, putting us on track to increase the planet’s temperature by 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels by 2040. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), we must limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius to avoid the most dangerous impacts of climate change.
Increasingly, scientists are recognizing that negative emissions technologies (NETs) to remove and sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere will be an essential component in the strategy to mitigate climate change. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), a multidisciplinary Department of Energy research lab, is pursuing a portfolio of negative emissions technologies and related research. These range from geological and terrestrial sequestration, to conversion to bioproducts, to thermal reactors for hydrogen fuels.