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Monday, June 27, 2016

Dog of the week

Meet Lilly
Animal Rescue Rhode Island
  
Woof! My name is Lilly and I love to play around.

I'm a fun-loving, happy-all-the-time, glass-is-half-full 2 year-old lab mix looking for my forever home.

Anything you do, I'll want to do too.

I may be the right fit for a home with another dog, and possibly kids as well.

With my own brand of surprises, life with me will keep you constantly on your toes and the fun is guaranteed!

OR ELSE!

House Committee Demands Obama Commit an Impeachable Offense

As time rapidly runs out on the two-term presidency of Barack Obama, the House Committee on Oversight and Government

Reform will hold hearings today to grill administration officials about the lack of exploitable scandals originating in the White House, sources say.

President Obama after being told he must send documentation of impeachment-worthy offenses to House Republicans by sundown.

"We've exhausted all of our leads and didn't turn up a thing," said a Republican committee member who asked to remain anonymous.

"Solyndra, Fast and Furious, bowing to world leaders, the IRS, the tan suit---even our ace in the hole, Benghazi, turned out to be a nothingburger and at this point we're down to investigating rounding errors in office supply expenditures."


Sunday, June 26, 2016

Flip-flops

Big week coming for candidate declarations
By Will Collette

Filippi searches for ideas for new media stunts
This is the week where we find out who will run for election and re-election for Charlestown municipal positions and for the one House seat and two state Senate districts that cover Charlestown as all candidates must file their declarations this week.

We’ve heard there may be a number of changes in the town roster. Charlestown has been so totally dominated by the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA Party) that all important decisions have already been made in secret, and official town meetings are just a formality. That sucks the life out wanting to run, either on the CCA Party ticket or in opposition.

The likely lackluster municipal races will probably be overshadowed by livelier battles for General Assembly seats.


Butterflies are free to fly


VIDEO: in praise of sad music

Durham University

Watch and hear this wonderful performance on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ddFj_eMPCnE

Researchers at Durham University, UK and the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, said their findings could have implications for how music therapy and rehabilitation could help people's moods.

The musicologists looked at the emotional experiences associated with sad music of 2,436 people across three large-scale surveys in the UK and Finland.

They identified the reasons for listening to sad music, and emotions involved in memorable experiences related to listening to sad music.


Senior moments explained

Georgia Institute of Technology

A new study from the Georgia Institute of Technology finds that older people struggle to remember important details because their brains can't resist the irrelevant "stuff" they soak up subconsciously. As a result, they tend to be less confident in their memories.

Researchers looked at brain activity from EEG sensors and saw that older participants wandered into a brief "mental time travel" when trying to recall details. 

This journey into their subconscious veered them into a cluttered space that was filled with both relevant and irrelevant information. This clutter led to less confidence, even when their recollections were correct. 

Cluttering of the brain is one reason older people are more susceptible to manipulation, the researchers say. The study appears online in the journal Neuropsychologia.


Help feed kids this summer


Rhode Island Community Food Bank

Corvette Club donates food at Summer Food Drive

Food Bank Launches Summer Food Drive

Summer Food Drive poster and collection bin
During the summer, the need for food assistance among families spikes as children lose access to the healthy, nutritious meals they normally receive at school. To help fill the gap throughout the summer months, the Food Bank is asking the community to support the Summer Food Drive.
Here’s how you can help:
First Gentleman of Rhode Island and Chair of the Summer Food Drive Andy Moffit launched the campaign along with Food Bank CEO Andrew Schiff by encouraging Rhode Islanders to join the effort and help their neighbors in need.


Help Feed Our Hungry Neighbors


RI Community Food Bank
200 Niantic Avenue
Providence, RI 02907
P: (401) 942-MEAL (6325)
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube

Should lawyers be ethically obligated to protect the environment?


Contrary to many corny jokes, lawyers do follow a code of ethics. But there’s a glaring omission in the professions’ ethical outline: the environment.

The American Bar Association’s Model Rules of Professional Conduct is a suggested blueprint for state bars, laying out a boilerplate for client-lawyer relationships, public service, communication and other matters of the professions. “It talks about other legal obligations for third parties, but never talks about the environment,” said Tom Lininger, a professor at the University of Oregon School of Law.

Lininger wrote the “time has come to remedy the conspicuous omission of environmental protection from the list of lawyers’ ethical duties,” in a paper for the Boston College Law Review. He argues in the paper that, as things currently stand, lawyers are ethically encouraged to advocate for clients but there are no incentives for minimizing potential environmental harm. He proposed a series of “green ethics” amendments to ABA’s rules. 


Saturday, June 25, 2016

Restore Democracy


If Donald Trump continues to implode, Hillary Clinton will win simply by being the presidential candidate who isn’t Trump.

But the prospect of a President Trump is so terrifying that Hillary shouldn’t take any chances.

The latest match-up polls show her about 6 points ahead – a comfortable but not sure-fire margin.

What else can she offer other than that she’s also experienced and would be the first woman to hold the job?

So far, she’s put forth a bunch of respectable policy ideas. But they’re small relative to the economic problems most Americans face and to Americans’ overwhelming sense the nation is off track.

She needs a big idea that gives her candidacy a purpose and rationale – and, if she’s elected president, a mandate to get something hugely important done.

What could that big idea be? I can think of several big economic proposals. The problem is they couldn’t get through Congress – even if, as now seems possible, Democrats retake the Senate.

Nor, for that matter, could Hillary’s smaller ideas get through.

Which suggests a really big idea – an idea that’s the prerequisite for every other one, an idea that directly addresses what’s disturbing so many Americans today – an idea that, if she truly commits herself to it, would even reassure voters about Hillary Clinton herself.

The big idea I’m talking about is democracy.


Shudder at the thought


Energy tide has changed

Energy companies are finding they must Follow the Money

World records tumbled in renewable energy this month. Utilities, facing short-term existential threat in the face of clean-energy growth, continued to wrestle with the imperative of escaping the energy incumbency.

Oil and gas companies, facing longer term threat to business-model viability, read dire assessments of their prospects in places they could not have imagined possible until recently.

Investors continued to awaken to climate risk, and a critical mass of governments stayed broadly on course for the current and future action that the Paris Agreement requires of them. None of this, however, happened as fast as the recent run of world-record monthly average temperatures merits.

Unprecedented wildfires and die offs of coral reefs were harsh reminders this month of the race against time that civilisation is running.


We’re doing better

The JAMA Network Journals

In nationally representative surveys conducted between 1999 and 2012, several improvements in self-reported dietary habits were identified, such as increased consumption of whole grains, with additional findings suggesting persistent or worsening disparities based on race/ethnicity and education and income level, according to a study appearing in the June 21 issue of JAMA.

Suboptimal diet is among the leading causes of poor health, particularly obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and diet-related cancers. 

In the United States, dietary factors are estimated to account for more than 650,000 deaths per year and 14 percent of all disability-adjusted life-years lost. 

Understanding trends in dietary habits is crucial to inform priorities and policies to improve diets and reduce diet-related illness. 


College Savings program comes with 35 new jobs

New Warwick Office of Rhode Island's 529 College Savings Program will hire 35

General Treasurer Seth Magaziner joined with Governor Gina M. Raimondo and Warwick Mayor Scott Avedisian to celebrate the opening of Ascensus College Savings' new Warwick office. 

The opening of the Warwick office brings 35 jobs to Rhode Island and will be used to administer Rhode Island's college saving program.

"This new office is an example of how the Treasurer's Office can work with our partners to create jobs for Rhode Islanders," Treasurer Magaziner said. 

"All children deserve a good education, and our state's economic comeback will only be as strong as the skills of our workforce. Our partnership with Ascensus will ensure that more Rhode Islanders can realize the dream of receiving a college education."

Treasurer Magaziner named Ascensus College Savings as the new program administrator for Rhode Island's 529 college savings program last November.


Friday, June 24, 2016

The environment loves me. I’m going to do very well with the environment. It’s gonna be great.


TrumpSign_Top

In early June, two news organizations dug up documented but long-forgotten tidbits on Donald Trump’s on-again, off-again relationship with the environment.

And the incompatibility of the findings is emblematic of his long, complicated relationship with reality.

Presumably donning a gas mask for the chore before him, Max Rosenthal of Mother Jones read Trump’s 1997 book, The Art of the Comeback

The Donald, it seems, regarded concerns over asbestos as a Mafia-inspired conspiracy.  The fire-proofing mineral, he said, just “got a bad rap” and is “100 percent safe, once applied.” The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, apparently in cahoots with the Mob, differed, saying there was “no safe level” of asbestos exposure.

In the late 90’s, Trump agreed to an undisclosed settlement with undocumented construction workers at his New York City Trump Tower site, who alleged they worked in “choking clouds of asbestos dust without protective equipment.”

Writing in Grist, Ben Adler and Rebecca Leber unearthed Trump’s support of a call for action on the eve of the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit. The full-page New York Times ad warned “if we fail to act now, it is scientifically irrefutable that there will be catastrophic and irreversible consequences for humanity and our planet.”

Joining Trump and three of his children as signers were some of the least Trump-like business leaders in America: Vermont ice cream magnates Ben and Jerry, philanthropist Jeff Skoll, Martha Stewart, Deepak Chopra. The founders of Patagonia, Chipotle, Seventh Generation, Aveda, and yes, the creators of Barney the Dinosaur and the Blue Man Group.  

As a special added irony, Graydon Carter, a legendary Trump tormentor through relentless and mirthful taunting in Spy Magazine, is joined with the Donald therein.

Just two months after joining the call to action, Trump cited the unusually snowy 2010 winter in the Northeast as the reason to strip Al Gore of his shared Nobel Peace Prize. “China, Japan and India are laughing at America’s stupidity,” he told the membership of his Trump National Golf Club outside New York City.

Time and again, the fairways of Trump’s far-flung golf empire have been the setting for his assaults on the Greens. Later in 2010 at another Trump National Golf Course (he owns 17 golf resorts worldwide) in Loudon County, Virginia, Trump ordered a mile-long stretch of Potomac River shoreline deforested so that his golfers could have a better view of the river. 

More than 400 mature trees disappeared, removing habitat for bald eagles and migratory birds. In their place, tree stumps and an eroding riverbank.

The Trump National Golf Course in Bedminster, New Jersey, was cited by the state’s environment agency in 2011 for tree removal and wetlands damage. The course is also in a partnership with New Jersey Audubon and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on a habitat restoration project.

“I have a great environmental record,” said the Donald as his golf course controversies swirled. “I have a record that, in my opinion, everybody would love.” 

Except, perhaps for employees of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which Trump has vowed to eliminate. Except that he mistakenly called the EPA the “Department of Environmental Protection,” which is the name of the state agency that slapped his New Jersey course.

Meadowlands_600About 30 miles to the east of Bedminster lies the broken dream of yet another Trump golf course. EnCap was an ambitious plan to convert 1,330 acres of the Hackensack Meadowlands—an estuary five miles from Times Square better known as the final resting place for both metro New York’s trash and Mafia victims—into thousands of units of housing, office space and a world class golf course.  

When the original investors ran into financial trouble and accusations of organized crime involvement, Trump rode in to rescue EnCap (he was not implicated in the alleged Mob ties, and an investigation by then-US Attorney Chris Christie was inconclusive).

What ensued was a bitter two-year battle between Trump and state and local leaders, including future EPA chief Lisa Jackson, then in charge of NJDEP. “In my opinion you don’t put around four billion tons of housing on a landfill which is on top of a marsh,” said John Hipp, Republican mayor of the town of Rutherford.
"I have a great environmental record. I have a record that, in my opinion, everybody would love." Donald Trump
Trump pressed to increase the housing units on the land, while low-balling the costs to make the polluted land habitable. In 2008, New Jersey pulled the plug, losing $50 million on the abortive deal. 

And Trump never saw his asking price of $12 million for the honor of using the name "Trump" on the project.

With the exception of the 2009 New York Times ad, Trump has been unusually consistent in his tweets and public pronouncements on climate change, calling it “pseudoscience,” a Chinese-led “hoax,” and on a particularly snowy day, “bullshit.”

But when erosion at his seaside Trump International Golf Links in County Clare, Ireland, became a threat, Trump petitioned to build a wall—a seawall, to protect the links from “global warming and its effects.”

Scotlandprotest_smallerOne more golf item before we hit the clubhouse: In 2012, Trump built what he has called “the world’s greatest golf course” after obtaining permission to plow through protected dunes on the Scottish coast near Aberdeen. 

Altering the beloved dunes was tolerable for most locals, though, since Trump promised 6,000 jobs with the opening of his golf links and resort. 

They even gave Trump a pass when he described the neighboring ancient farm buildings as a “slum” and looked the other way when the stiff Aberdeenshire winds made the Donald’s epic coiffure start breakdancing.

But those same winds created a threat Trump could not accept. A proposal for 23 wind turbines, within sight of the Trump resort, prompted the kinds of Trumpian outbursts that have become routine in this year’s election campaign. 

Trump, like William Wallace before him, was “fighting for the benefit of Scotland.” First Minister Alex Salmond, who supported the windfarm, would be “known for centuries as the man who destroyed Scotland.”

Trump also branded the wind menace as potentially the worst thing that ever happened to Scotland. (The sacking of Scotland by the Vikings in 790, the Great Plague of 1645, the Famine of the 1840’s and the 1988 Lockerbie terrorism disaster be damned.)

Losing a third and final round in the UK’s Supreme Court last December, Trump has had little to say about the windfarm since. But Alex Salmond cheerfully tore a phrase from the Trump playbook, calling him a “three time loser.” Also lost? All but 200 of those promised 6,000 jobs.

Back to the iconic hair for a moment. On several occasions in the last five years, Trump has launched into an extended riff on his understanding of hairspray and the ozone layer. 

In a campaign speech in May, he repeated the tirade to a Charleston, West Virginia, audience. Hairspray, he said, “Used to be real good.  Today, you put the hairspray on, it’s good for 12 minutes.”

Blaming regulations that restricted aerosols known to damage the Earth’s ozone layer, Trump continued. “So if I take hairspray, and if I spray it in my apartment, which is all sealed, you’re telling me that affects the ozone layer? I say no way folks, no way.”*

The audience in America’s most iconic coal mining state approved. Even more so when Trump made non-specific promises to bring the coal industry back to its former glory. But Trump has been equally fond of the fracking industry, widely blamed/credited with breaking Big Coal’s back. 

And even coal industry zealots like Bob Murray, the outspoken boss of Murray Energy, have marked The Donald as out to lunch on this. Murray added that when he asked the pro-natural-gas Trump about LNG, the potential Commander-in-Chief said “What’s LNG?”

CAdroughtmap_500x300In contemporary America, climate denial and anti-regulatory tirades are a dime a dozen. But the one Trump utterance that truly knocked me off my chair was this one. 

Speaking to a rally in Fresno in late May he looked Californians in the eye and told them that their four year long drought does not exist. 

“They don’t understand – nobody understands it.  There is no drought. They turn the water out into the ocean,” all to protect “a certain kind of three-inch fish.”

Just wow.

He was apparently referring to the refusal by state and federal officials to virtually drain some Central Valley streams by diverting water to farmers and ranchers stricken by the non-drought. Federal law prohibits such diversions if they substantially harm wildlife, including the endangered Delta smelt.

California has had the driest four-year period in its history, and while El Niño rains brought some temporary relief, the lack of rainfall is still an unfolding disaster, including in smelt-free parts of the state. Abandoned orchards, parched cattle, vanished snowpack, drained reservoirs and municipal water restrictions aside, 1.1 million Californians pulled Trump’s lever in the June 6 primary.

Oh, there’s one more golf thing. If by chance Mr. Trump is wrong about climate change being a hoax created by China, scratch at least three of his golf course off the list. His seaside, sea-level courses in Miami, Palm Beach and Jupiter, Florida, will all be underwater and offshore.
*Bonus hairspray information:  According to the Houston Chronicle, Trump uses “CHI Helmet Head Extra Firm Hair Spray,” developed and sold by Palestinian immigrant Farouk Shami.  Mr. Shami halted his company’s sponsorship of Trump’s Miss Universe Pageant after Trump’s anti-Islamic comments late last year, which Trump doubled down on after the Orlando massacre.
The Daily Climate is an independent, foundation-funded news service covering energy, the environment and climate change. Find us on Twitter @TheDailyClimate or email editor Brian Bienkowski at bbienkowski [at] EHN.org

Photo credits: Trump National Golf Club, Washington D.C. (Credit: Sandy Kemsley); Donald Trump (Credit: Gage Skidmore); New Jersey Meadowlands (Credit: proteinbiochemist); Wind rally in Edinburgh (Credit: Ric Lander); Drought graphic (Credit: University of Nebraska)

The Donald's money issues

Mike Luckovich
For more cartoons by Mike Luckovich, CLICK HERE.