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L.A. Times Explains U.S. ‘Seems to Have Largely Escaped Winter.’ Failure to Mention Global Warming Is ‘Journalistic Malpractice’

U.S. Heat Records Demolish Cold Records 13th Month in a Row; January Ending With Incredible Ratio of 27.5 to 1 in Lower 48

For reasons that no major U.S. news outlet can apparently explain, it has been really, really warm in the middle of winter over much of the country.  How warm is it?  It is so damn warm:

  • “Dick Cheney waterboarded himself.”
  • “Charlie Sheen was snorting actual snow.”
  • “I saw Rupert Murdoch trying to hack his way into a Cold Stone Creamery.”.
  • “Congress had to install a fan on the debt ceiling.”

It was so damn warm that the New York Times ran this amazing story:

Now this is just the paper’s City Room blog, so it is almost understandable that the article never mentions global warming.  But the L.A. Times actually wrote an entire story the same day trying to explain why most of the country missed out on winter:

That story was filed under “news/science” — so climatologist Michael Mann rightly tweeted that it was “simply journalistic malpractice” to omit any mention of global warming in the story.  Indeed, as we’ll see, that omission was beyond absurd in this case.

But first, it is important to point out that this isn’t the case of just a few warm days over part of the country.  January has, statistically, seen an extremely off the charts heat wave for the whole month for most of the country.

Steve Scolnik at Capital Climate analyzed the data from NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center and found U.S. heat records have been outnumbering cold records by a stunning amount, as this chart shows:

Read more

NEWS FLASH

It’s Cold In Alaska, So Sarah Palin Asks: ‘What Global Warming?’ | In a post on her Facebook page, former Alaska governor and former GOP vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin noted that Alaska school children don’t get out of school until temperatures drop below -55 degrees fahrenheit. Putting up a photo of her son doing chores in -20 degree weather, Palin asks: “Global warming? What global warming?” Palin notes “the balmy 65 degree (above zero) weather in the Beltway today” — a record high. Nonetheless, Palin is making the common mistake of confusing weather with climate change. She might not notice it, but the pattern of warming is clear. Even the U.S.’s northernmost city — in Alaska — felt the effects last year with “a record-breaking 86 consecutive days at or above freezing, far more than the previous record of 68 days set in 2009.” (HT: Blake Hounshell)

Alyssa

Jonathan Franzen’s Mixed Messages On Books And Obama’s Reading

Jonathan Franzen has been in the news lately for saying two things. First, he told attendees at the Hay Festival that e-readers are a threat to our society:

Someone worked really hard to make the language just right, just the way they wanted it. They were so sure of it that they printed it in ink, on paper. A screen always feels like we could delete that, change that, move it around. So for a literature-crazed person like me, it’s just not permanent enough…a sense of permanence has always been part of the experience…Everything else in your life is fluid, but here is this text that doesn’t change…Will there still be readers 50 years from now who feel that way? Who have that hunger for something permanent and unalterable? I don’t have a crystal ball. But I do fear that it’s going to be very hard to make the world work if there’s no permanence like that. That kind of radical contingency is not compatible with a system of justice or responsible self-government.

Then, in the same speech, he apparently voiced some skepticism about whether President Obama should be spending his time reading: “One of the reasons I love Barack Obama as much as I do is that we finally have a real reader in the White House. It’s absolutely amazing. There’s one of us running the U.S. [Although] when I heard he was reading Freedom I thought, ‘Why are you reading a novel? There are important things to be doing!”

Now, I’m obviously a big advocate of having a reader in the White House, both because I think consuming smart culture, whether it’s Freedom or Homeland can provide perspective on both issues and the national mindset, and because I think even presidents need a break. I’ve never particularly understood people who object to presidential leisure, within reasonable limits, of course. The presidency is an incredibly difficult job, probably too large for one person. But if we’re going to have one person do it, that person needs to be saved from burnout and insanity as best as possible, a process that means both vacations and reading things that are not giant briefings with check boxes attached.

On the larger issue of e-readers, I’m not sure I see Franzen’s point. Most e-readers don’t contain the option to alter the words of the text itself, only to highlight, add bookmarks, and marginalia and notes. Having a print copy of a book doesn’t guarantee that it’ll be treated with reverence, as any college student or deeply engaged reader’s marked-up texts can attest. The move from cotton paper to pulp-based paper actually means that our books are less permanent and lasting edifices than they used to be. Digital copies may last longer, and in more pristine condition, than our paperbacks of today do. That doesn’t mean that books can’t be fetish objects, or artwork, of course. But digital can offer its own interactivity, picture quality, etc., and so if you’re just critiquing the form in terms of its permanence, I think Franzen is barking up the wrong tree. The real question should be whether any innovation in the form brings in more readers and gets them to read more books. It’s still early, but research suggests that people who own e-readers are upping their book consumption. From both an economic and an intellectual perspective, that should make Franzen pretty happy.

Economy

GOP Declares Obama Plan That Taxes Banks To Help Homeowners ‘Dead On Arrival’

With the housing crisis still strangling a full economic recovery, President Obama used his State of the Union speech last week to call for further assistance to homeowners who have been able to stay current on their mortgages. The loosely-outlined plan would allow homeowners to refinance their mortgages at current low interest rates and would be paid for by a tax on large banks — many of which contributed to the housing bubble and its subsequent burst.

Congressional Republicans, however, aren’t willing to go along with such a plan and have declared it “dead on arrival” if Obama proposes it, the Wall Street Journal reports:

But any such scheme that relies on a bank tax “would be dead on arrival,” said Rep. Scott Garrett (R., N.J.), chairman of the subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises, in an interview last week. “No one is going to suggest that the way to help the mortgage market is to propose a tax indirectly on the system,” he said.

The housing crisis, now in its sixth year, remains one of the biggest drags on the economy, with four million Americans behind on their payments or in foreclosure. The crisis has strangled homeowners who are current on their mortgages too, as housing prices continue to fall. Prices dropped to a post-bubble low in November 2011, according to analysis by Standard & Poor’s and Case Shiller, and “there are few, if any, signs in the numbers that a turning point is close at hand.”

The proposed bank fee is similar to an earlier Obama proposal, the Financial Crisis Responsibility Fee, that was killed by Republicans. Such a fee would apply only to the largest banks — those with greater than $50 billion in assets. Many of those banks were at the center of the housing crisis, proliferating subprime loans and engaging in fraudulent and discriminatory lending and foreclosure practices.

The ten congressional districts that would benefit the most from mortgage relief are all represented by Republicans. But in declaring Obama’s proposal “dead on arrival,” it appears the GOP has put the interests of big banks ahead of those of struggling homeowners.

NEWS FLASH

ACA Will Likely Boost Florida’s Health Sector | Republican presidential candidates have been peddling promises to overturn the ACA in an effort to secure votes in the primary elections, and their message has struck a chord in Florida — the state that’s leading the effort in challenging the constitutionality of the law. But as MarketWatch’s Ruth Mantell notes, Florida is home to about 960,000 jobs in health care and social assistance field — around 13 percent of all nonfarm payroll positions in the state — and can expect to see substantial gains in health employment as a result of reform. Massachusetts experienced significant increases in health care jobs after Mitt Romney’s reforms and estimates suggest that the expansion of coverage under the ACA could add between 250,000 and 400,000 jobs annually over the next decade — all the while modernizing the health care system and encouraging higher quality, lower cost care. — Fatima Najiy

NEWS FLASH

NATO Report: Afghan Gov’t Officials Interested In Joining Taliban | The BBC reports that according to a new secret NATO report, Pakistani security services are directly assisting the Taliban in Afghanistan and that Pakistan knows the locations of senior Taliban leaders. “Pakistan’s manipulation of the Taliban senior leadership continues unabatedly,” the report says. In another “damning conclusion,” NATO says that in the last year there has been unprecedented interest, even from members of the Afghan government, in joining the Taliban cause.

Health

Nation’s Largest Cancer Charity Caves To Right Wing Pressure, Ends Relationship With Planned Parenthood

Susan G. Komen for the Cure is the country’s best-known and best-funded breast cancer organization. Known for it’s iconic pink ribbon and annual Race for the Cure event, the organization has invested nearly $2 billion in cancer education and research since its founding in 1982.

But today, bowing to political pressure, Komen for the Cure announced that it is severing its partnership with Planned Parenthood and will stop providing hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants that allow their centers to perform breast exams on women who could not otherwise get them.

Since anti-abortion activists and their Republican allies ratcheted up their crusade against Planned Parenthood last year, they’ve targeted any and all allies of the organization to try to make inroads, including the cancer charity. Planned Parenthood provides birth control, STD testing, and cancer screenings to low-income women.

In a press release Planned Parenthood said it was deeply saddened and disappointed by the decision:

Planned Parenthood Federation of America today expressed deep disappointment in response to the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation’s decision to stop funding breast cancer prevention, screenings and education at Planned Parenthood health centers. Anti-choice groups in America have repeatedly threatened the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation for partnering with Planned Parenthood to provide these lifesaving cancer screenings and news articles suggest that the Komen Foundation ultimately succumbed to these pressures.

“We are alarmed and saddened that the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation appears to have succumbed to political pressure. Our greatest desire is for Komen to reconsider this policy and recommit to the partnership on which so many women count,” said Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

In the last few weeks, the Komen Foundation has begun notifying local Planned Parenthood programs that their breast cancer initiatives will not be eligible for new grants (beyond existing agreements or plans).

Komen’s pretext for ending the alliance is the spurious congressional investigation into Planned Parenthood led by Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-FL). Democrats say the far-reaching investigation is a political witch hunt and abuse of government resources.

Komen’s new Senior Vice President of Public Policy, Karen Handel, not only has a long anti-choice history, but pledged to eliminate grants for Planned Parenthood to provide breast and cervical cancer screenings when she ran for governor of Georgia in 2010.

According to Planned Parenthood, in the past five years support from Susan G. Komen allowed their health centers to provide nearly 170,000 breast exams and 6,400 mammogram referrals. The charity’s decision has succeeded only in depriving low-income women of cancer screenings that could save their lives — a move that flies in the face of Komen’s mission.

Security

Leaked Documents Detail Arab League’s Chaotic Monitoring Mission In Syria

Arab League monitors arrive at a Greek Orthodox church in Damascus

The head of the Arab League and the prime minister of Qatar called on the U.N. Security Council today to take action against the dramatic increase in violence around Damascus and endorse an Arab League peace plan to facilitate Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s handover of power. But while the League sought Security council support for their peace plan, new documents gives insights into the disorganized and chaotic Arab League monitoring mission which was suspended two days ago.

Arab League monitors in Syria experienced shortages of equipment and severe restrictions in movement imposed by the Syrian government according to a confidential account [PDF] of the mission acquired by ForeignPolicy.com’s Colum Lynch today.

The document shows that “many of the 166 Arab observers parachuted into Syria on Dec. 24 to document the widening violence were utterly incapable of enduring the rigors of life in a country roiled by social upheaval and conflict…” writes Lynch.

Despite the grim picture painted in the document, Gen. Mohamed Ahmed Moustafa Al-Dabbi, the chief of the Arab League monitoring mission and the author of the document, warned that “Any termination of the work of the mission after this short term will undermine the positive results — even if incomplete — that have been achieved so far.”

The leaked report mainly focuses on the logistical problems faced by the mission, the Arab League’s first major attempt at a monitoring mission, but a recommendation within the report that Arab governments not give up their mediating role to U.N. Security Council sparked a strong reaction from European diplomats. They argue the Arab League mission had no business making such a self-interested assertion while Russian officials say the Security Council should review the League’s full account of the mission, reports Lynch.

Lynch reports that European diplomats have also taken issue with the report’s omission of key details in the death of a French television journalist. Al-Dabbi writes that “reports of the mission already indicate that the French journalist died, and a Belgian reporter injured, as a result of mortar attacks fired by the opposition,” but a European official told ForeignPolicy.com’s Turtle Bay blog that the report didn’t include testimony from other reporters who reported that the French journalist was “exposed to enemy fire deliberately” by pro-government supporters.

NEWS FLASH

Seven States Are Considering Eliminating Their Income Tax | Buoyed by the Tea Party, Republicans took over state houses across the country in 2010 and quickly pushed legislation to advance the conservative agenda on voting rights, abortion, and immigration. But now, the AP reports, there’s a new target: the state income tax, with Republican lawmakers are pushing to repeal in Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma and South Carolina. Income tax revenue funds “bedrock government services, including roads and bridges and schools and prison systems,” and while several states can do without it by taxing things like oil production, it’s unclear how the new states considering repeals would fund themselves without having an income tax.

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