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Global Boiling: June Brings Climate Destruction Predicted By Scientists

As the planet warms, the destructive changes predicted by scientists are coming to pass. As in previous months, this June has seen records fall, people die, and infrastructure destroyed from the terrible power of our planet’s climatic system, fueled by increasing heat trapped by invisible greenhouse pollution from fossil fuels.

The 2009 U.S. Global Change Research Program report, Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States, described the changes coming to the United States in detail. Using multiple lines of evidence and theory, scientists from a broad array of government agencies explained that America needs to be on alert for the growing threats from global warming — immediately. The report described both regional sectoral impacts from a killer climate that are being seen not in the distant future, but now:

MIDWEST

During the summer, public health and quality of life, especially in cities, will be negatively affected by increasing heat waves, reduced air quality, and increasing insect and waterborne diseases.

June 12 -24: Two girls died during a 90+ heat wave in Portageville, MO.

The likely increase in precipitation in winter and spring, more heavy downpours, and greater evaporation in summer would lead to more periods of both floods and water deficits.

June 6: About a dozen tornadoes lit down in Illinois, knocking out power for thousands. In Ohio, tornadoes killed 7 people and injured several others in the towns of Lake Township and Millbury in Wood County, the deadliest tornado outbreak there in 25 years.

June 17: “At least three people were killed and dozens injured as a series of tornadoes tore through Minnesota, flattening homes, toppling power lines and leaving a big chunk of Wadena treeless.”

June 22: Floods and tornadoes from freak rains destroyed property throughout the Midwest.

June 23: Storms and flooding hit Michigan and Missouri, and devastated Edgerton, OH.

GREAT PLAINS

Projected changes in long-term climate and more frequent extreme events such as heat waves, droughts, and heavy rainfall will affect many aspects of life in the Great Plains.

June 14: “Record-busting rainfall and ensuing flooding in Oklahoma led to at least one death,” after “thunderstorms dumped as much as 10 inches of rain in some areas in a matter of hours.”

June 17: A “90-mile-an-hour microburst” blew apart a home in Montana, killing one.

SOUTHEAST

Projected increases in air and water temperatures will cause heat-related stresses for people, plants, and animals.

June 12 – : An extended 90+ heat wave in Charlotte, NC, damaged crops and brought smog to dangerous levels.

June 12 – 15: Augusta, GA’s “high temperature of 104 easily broke the record high” for June 15 at the close of a five-day 100+ heat wave.

June 11 – 17: A heat wave sets records in Ocala and Lakeland, FL.

NORTHEAST

Extreme heat and declining air quality are likely to pose increasing problems for human health, especially in urban areas.

June 19 – : A 90+ heat wave stretches up the Eastern seaboard, shattering records throughout the region, including Philadelphia, Frederick, MD and Washington, DC.

SOUTHWEST

Cities and agriculture face increasing risks from a changing climate.

June 3 – 9: A 100+ heatwave in Las Vegas peaks on June 6 at 110 degrees, the earliest such reading on record.

ENERGY SUPPLY AND USE and SOCIETY

Energy production and delivery systems are exposed to sea-level rise and extreme weather events in vulnerable regions.

June 5: An extreme thunderstorm that brought tornadoes to Vermont, Maine, and New Hampshire knocked out power for thousands in Massachusetts.

June 24: A freak tornado tore through Bridgeport, CT, causing severe damage and leaving 21,100 customers without power.

City residents and city infrastructure have unique vulnerabilities to climate change.

June 23: A violent storm “producing damaging winds, golf-ball-sized hail and brief rain-wrapped tornadoes” descended upon Chicago, knocking out power for 220,000 people

June 24: A freak storm knocked out power to 280,000 in the Philadelphia region.

AGRICULTURE

Extreme events such as heavy downpours and droughts are likely to reduce crop yields because excesses or deficits of water have negative impacts on plant growth.

June 24: Hail destroyed crops in Washington.

Meanwhile, in the rest of the world, floods have killed 365 in China, at least 144 people in Central America, 42 people in Brazil, 19 people in France, and at least 24 people in Ghana, leaving tens of thousands of people homeless. Ten million people face starvation from drought in Niger and Chad. Mohenjo-daro, “a ruined city in what is now Pakistan that contains the last traces of a 4,000-year-old civilization that flourished on the banks of the river Indus,” hit the fourth-hottest recorded temperature of all time at 128.6 F, behind Al ‘Aziziyah, Libya (136 F in 1922), Death Valley (134 in 1913) and Tirat Zvi, Israel (129 F in 1942).

Yglesias

Endgame

I don’t care, I don’t care, I don’t care:

— Philip Klein on Dave Weigel.

— Jeet Heer on Dave Weigel.

Jeff Goldberg’s war.

— Edmund Andrews has what I think is a smart take on Frank-Dodd.

— Are liberals not as liberal as we think?

— Interesting piece about divisions on the Fed board but it’s in a British paper so it may be made up.

— Clay Shirky’s “Power Laws, Weblogs, and Inequality”.

I met Krist Novoselic today and I think “Breed” is my favorite Nirvana song.

Media

Brian Kilmeade Provides Fox News Entertainment By Embarrassing Himself

Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade has been embarrassing himself more than usual over the last few days on Fox & Friends. Yesterday, after news broke that the cap BP placed on its leaking oil well had to be removed because one of its robots bumped the well’s venting system, Kilmeade had some harsh words for the robot. “I’d love to talk to that robot that knocked…the top off the cap that was in the bottom of the Gulf yesterday,” Kilmeade said. “What was that robot thinking?” he asked in disgust.

Then today, as Media Matters notes, the Fox co-host had this dim-witted question for President Obama:

KILMEADE: The President took a matter of hours to pick a commander in Afghanistan so why is it taking months to plug the leaking oil?

It’s unclear how Kilmeade believes that appointing an individual to lead the war in Afghanistan is comparable in difficulty to plugging an oil gusher in the Gulf of Mexico. Even Newt Gingrich found the comparison hard to swallow. “Is it fair to draw a correlation between the two?” co-host Gretchen Carlson asked. “No. No, no. The oil spill is more like the entire Afghan campaign,” Gingrich said.

To top it all off, on the Fox and Friends set this morning, Kilmeade played a little one-on-one with last night’s NBA draft top pick John Wall. After Wall dunked on Kilmeade and blocked his shots, Carlson had to show him how it’s done. Watch a compilation:

Last night on The Daily Show, Jon Stewart had to inform Kilmeade that “robots don’t think”:

STEWART: The BP guys, or the robot. Kilmeade. Robots don’t think. They’re machines. They don’t cry. They don’t fall in love. They can’t be your girlfriend. They’re f***in’ robots. It’s like talking to your toaster. “This English muffin is burnt! Why toaster!? Why?!?! Why have you done this to my breakfast?” Fox and Friends, I don’t want to have to do this everyday.

Economy

After Filibuster, Democrats Pull Extenders Bill In Favor Of Another Bill Republicans Promised To Bog Down

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY)

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY)

Yesterday, as expected, Republicans and Sen. Ben Nelson (D-NE) filibustered the Senate’s tax extenders bill, which would have extended unemployment benefits and several tax credits, as well as provided fiscal aid to states to help with their Medicaid bills. As a result of the Senate’s inaction, states may be forced to cut 200,000 jobs along with a host of health care and education programs, and 1.2 million people who were expecting unemployment benefits will see them disappear.

This obstructionism comes despite Senate Democrats chopping their original package nearly in half and finding pay-fors for the entire package except for the unemployment insurance. It also occurred despite a subdued economic assessment from the Federal Reserve, which said that “financial conditions have become less supportive of economic growth on balance.” “We have gone more than the extra mile,” said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT).

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) said that he is going to pull the extenders bill and move onto a bill meant to boost small business lending. “We’re going to move to the small business jobs bill,” said Reid. “We can’t pass [the extenders bill] until we get some Republicans…It’s up to them.” However, this is the same small business bill that Republicans have already said that they are going to bog down in their intense desire to cut taxes for the heirs of multimillionaires and billionaires:

A small-business bill coming soon to the Senate floor could provide the catalyst for a big issue: the long-awaited debate over the future of the estate tax. Asked Thursday whether he planned to push for an estate tax amendment on that bill, Minority Whip Jon Kyl said: “Count on it.”

It would be incredibly irresponsible for Congress to find spending offsets to cut the estate tax, considering the state of the economy and that the money could be used on job creation measures. But it would be doubly irresponsible to do so without passing the extenders bill, thus leaving the unemployed and those who rely on services in their states simply out to dry.

There are currently 15 millions Americans unemployed, and almost half of them have been out of work for at least six months, which is a post-World War II record. There are nearly five workers actively searching for work for every job available, compared to 1.5 per job opening before the recession began.

At the same time, income inequality is the worst its been since 1928. According to a new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, “the gaps in after-tax income between the richest 1 percent of Americans and the middle and poorest fifths of the country more than tripled between 1979 and 2007 (the period for which these data are available).”

To take care of that top one percent while leaving the unemployed with no safety net at all is simply unforgivable, but it’s what Republicans (and Ben Nelson!) are forcing the Congress to do at the moment.

Justice

‘Ick Factor’ Professor Fires Back At Huckabee, Diggs Deeper Into Motivation Of His Anti-Gay Views

Earlier this week I wondered what Mike Huckabee’s use of the “ick factor” in describing gay relationships and his subsequent clarification that he was merely using a reference developed by a gay academic, said about Huckabee and his particular aversion to gay people. Today, that academic Martha Nussbaum responded to Huckabee and helped clarify the whole thing:

The view I develop, on the basis of recent psychological research, is that projective disgust has its origin in a discomfort with one’s own body and its messier animal aspects, including sexuality, and that, in a defense mechanism, disgust is then projected outward onto vulnerable groups who are characterized as hyperphysical and hypersexual. In this way, the uncomfortable people displace their discomfort onto others, who are then targeted for various forms of social discrimination.

Thus the people to whom the term “projective disgust” applies are the insecure and emotionally stunted people who campaign against equal rights for gays and lesbians, not gays and lesbians themselves. Mr. Huckabee has gotten bad information about my work and has completely turned its meaning upside down, imputing to me a position (that gays and lesbians are disgusting) that I criticize as childish and morally deficient.

He owes me a public apology.

Maybe this helps explain some of his motivation, but more importantly, it deconstructs the notion that Huckabee’s opposition to gay rights rests in some rational theoretical or biblical disagreement. Many Christian Evangelicals, and Huckabee in particular, are very good at wrapping their ‘ick factor’ reactions in religious text to obscure the homophobia and add some extra legitimacy to their argument.

But moments like this unravel all that rationalization and remind us that Huckabee’s anti-gay views really have no place in a 21st century democratic policy debate.

Yglesias

The Frank/Dodd Bill

I apologize for being brief, but this is a hectic day for me so let me quickly recommend Pat Garofalo’s summary table comparing the House financial regulatory bill, the Senate financial regulatory bill, and the compromise proposal:

AP100324014560

To issue a quick judgment on it, there are three kinds of things people might want to see out of legislation on this subject. One is to prevent financial panics. The other is to prevent panics from turning into morally/politically/economically problematic “bailout or depression” scenarios. The last is to rethink the role that finance plays in American economic and social life. The bill doesn’t do the last thing at all and I think the extent to which it does the first thing is open to question but clearly progress is being made. On the second, it does a great job.

Media

Lobbying Firm Director Demands That WaPo Fire Blogger For Not Being ‘Unbiased Bystander’

Matt DornicMedia blog FishbowlDC instigated a supposed “controversy” surrounding former Washington Post blogger Dave Weigel, who reported on conservative politics. Yesterday, FishbowlDC published excerpts of e-mails from Weigel’s messages on a private listserv known as “JournoList.” In the e-mails, Weigel mocked Fox News coverage of Ron Paul fans, referring to them as “Paultards,” and sarcastically suggested Matt Drudge should “handle his emotional problems more responsibly, and set himself on fire.”

This morning, Tucker Carlson’s Daily Caller website revealed more e-mails from Weigel criticizing the far right for using the media to “violently, angrily divide America.” According to the e-mails, Weigel claimed some on the right have been motivated by “racism” as well as “white privilege.” FishbowlDC quickly highlighted The Daily Caller’s find, giddily commenting “the heat is on.” Later in the day, FishbowlDC writers Matt Dornic and Betsy Rothstein wrote a post attacking the Post for hiring Weigel, commenting, “If you’re a reporter you’re supposed to be an unbiased bystander.” (Dornic and Rothstein subsequently edited their post, changing the line to “you’re supposed to be objective“). Hours later, Weigel resigned from the Post.

However, with FishbowlDC bloggers like Dornic grandstanding and setting journalistic standards so strict that one cannot even express a “bias” against “racism” and “white privilege,” he does not apply the same standard to his own conduct. Earlier this year, Dornic was hired as a “Director” for the mega-lobbying and communications firm Quinn Gillespie & Associates (QGA), a firm that not only does direct lobbying, but advances the agenda of their clients by helping them gain favorable coverage in the media.

On FishbowlDC’s website, QGA’s clients and events are regularly promoted with no disclosure that Dornic is a PR promoter for the firm:

– Dornic wrote a post earlier this month promoting an event with former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-TN) at a party with his boss and QGA namesake, Jack Quinn.

– In April, FishbowlDC published multiple posts promoting a QGA party with D.C. journalists.

– Susanna Quinn, wife of QGA managing partner Jack Quinn, is promoted regularly by FishbowlDC, as are her social and philanthropic activities.

– FishbowlDC has publicized a new hire for AARP, a client of QGA, and Dornic also has promoted very positive stories about companies like Sony, another QGA client.

– Dornic pens blog posts about his colleagues at his lobbying firm.

Of course, Dornic probably sees no conflict of interest in his duel lobbying/media blogging role, but he was quick to attack Weigel for opinions expressed in private e-mails on a listserv for fellow journalists.

Journalists like the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg have seized upon the FishbowlDC-concocted controversy to smear Weigel. Goldberg blogged today: “The sad truth is that the Washington Post, in its general desperation for page views, now hires people who came up in journalism without much adult supervision, and without the proper amount of toilet-training.” But as the American Prospect’s Adam Serwer notes on twitter, Goldberg “linked Saddam to [al Qaeda] and said Iraq had WMD” yet “criticizes the Post for hiring Weigel.”

Security

What Happened To Iran’s ‘Democracy Clock’?

The Cable’s Josh Rogin reports on the passage — by overwhelming majorities — of a new Iran sanctions bill, which includes measures targeting Iran’s importation of refined petroleum. Rogin notes that “the administration has said little in public about when it expects the sanctions to show results, but time is a critical factor in the White House’s calculations”:

Iran watchers speak of three “clocks” driving U.S. policy: the speed at which Iranian nuclear technology is maturing; the time it takes for the sanctions to bite, bringing Iran to the table; and the patience of regional actors.

Yes, the patience of regional “actors.” That’s one of the most judicious uses of the letter “s” that I’ve ever seen. Interestingly, absent among the clocks mentioned by the Iran watchers Rogin spoke to is one that was, until somewhat recently, mentioned frequently: The democracy clock.

In the wake of the Green movement’s failure to turn out huge demonstrations on the anniversary of the Iranian revolution, a lot of people seem to have decided that the movement is simply no longer a factor. One of those is Fareed Zakaria, whose writing and analysis I usually a like a lot.

Responding Monday to a speech by Sen. John McCain in the New Republic — in which McCain, as usual, confuses blustery, onanistic grandstanding with having good ideas about foreign policy — Zakaria ably dismantles the latest neocon talking point that the Iranians were so close to overthrowing their regime if only President Obama had made more speeches!

I think Zakaria steps wrong, though, when attacking “The comparison of Iran’s Green Revolution to the velvet revolutions of Eastern Europe”:

In 1989 dissidents had three forces on their side: nationalism (because communism had been imposed by force by a foreign power), religion (because communism repressed the church) and democracy. The Green Movement has only one: democracy. The regime has always used the religiosity of the people to its advantage, but it has also become skilled at manipulating nationalism.

Religion and nationalism both play an enormous part in the Green movement’s rhetoric, which I saw as primarily aimed at contesting the legacy of the revolution, not overthrowing it. And, as I noted at the time, one of the most significant aspects of the movement’s protests and rhetoric was the the significant extent to which a long extant Islamic critique of velayet-e faqih (rule of the clerics) seemed to have finally found a vehicle in the Greens, who continue to be supported by a number of dissident clerics.

TNR editor Leon Wieseltier also notes these aspects in his otherwise petulant response to Zakaria, in which he accuses Zakaria of having “prettified and extenuated the Iranian regime” by offering an analysis of Iran’s power structure that is more nuanced than Wieseltier apparently feels is appropriate. But the bottom line here is that we shouldn’t count Iran’s democrats out. Political change of this sort is difficult and takes time, and Iran’s Greens know that. And Mr. Bomb Bomb Bomb Bomb Bomb Iran should know that his support is probably the last thing they need.

Yglesias

Re: Dave Weigel

It’s not surprising to me that some conservatives don’t like my friend Dave Weigel. He does excellent, no-holds-barred reporting on the conservative movement and that sometimes makes the movement look foolish. At the same time, he’s always done a good job of staying on excellent terms with many conservatives and players in the movement—that’s part of how he reports effectively. So somehow we got to the point where Fishbowl DC writer and lobbyist Matt Dornic decided he wanted to start publicly campaigning for Weigel to be fired and a writer at The Daily Caller teamed up with someone with access to an off-the-record email list to embarrass Dave by leaking some intemperate emails that he’d written with an expectation of privacy.

It sort of surprises me that this campaign worked, and The Washington Post seems to have felt that these emails constitute a good reason to accept Weigel’s resignation. I say “sort of” because obviously no organization that employs Charles Krauthammer on a regular basis can be counted on to exercise sound judgment in a consistent way. Ben Smith argues persuasively that this confirms the theory he’s held for some time that the Post was confused when they hired Dave and thought they were getting a “conservative blogger” to counterbalance Ezra Klein. It’s a bit confusing to me how one could have thought that, but a lot about the Post confuses me.

It doesn’t surprise me at all to see Jeffrey Goldberg dancing on Weigel’s grave. In some ways, it’s an illustrative contrast. For all the hate that’s been directed at Dave lately, nobody disputes any of his actual reporting. Instead they’re digging around his private emails. All I’ve ever seen Goldberg do in private is be funny and charming. It’s his work that’s dangerous and inaccurate.

To sum up, though, I think the odds that Dave Weigel will still be doing political reporting in 2030 are much better than the odds that Kaplan, Inc.’s political journalism subsidiary will still be in business.

Alyssa

A Bit of Business, and a Seal of Approval

Sorry for the slow pace today, all. I was traveling for work the past couple of days, and I’m playing catchup on everything. In addition to that, I’ll have an announcement about the Future of the Blog on Monday, but I’m trying to get a couple of things straightened out, so stay tuned.

In the interim though, I bring tidings of great joy! Rumor is out that the damn fools involved in Sherlock Holmes and its forthcoming sequel appear to be moving away from the damnfool idea of having Brad Pitt play Professor Moriarty (it was under discussion for the original, then the sequel) and are considering Daniel Day-Lewis instead. Dude isn’t quite stooped enough, but I think he’d do nicely. And if it comes to the Falls, that could be quite a compelling fight.

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