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4 out of 5 Americans Affected by Weather-Related Disasters Since 2006, Study Finds

Climate Change Worsens Many of These Disasters

Figure 1. County-level map of federally-declared weather-related disasters between 2006 – 2011. Tornadoes and severe thunderstorms in the Midwest, and heavy rains and snows from Nor’easters, hurricanes, and other storms in the Northeast gave those two regions the most disaster declarations. An interactive version of this map that allows one to click and see the individual disasters by county is on the Environment America website.

by Jeff Masters, reposted from the WunderBlog

Since 2006 , federally declared weather-related disasters in the United States have affected counties housing 242 million people–or roughly four out of five Americans. That’s the remarkable finding of Environment America, who last week released a detailed report on extreme weather events in the U.S.

The report analyzed FEMA data to study the number of federally declared weather-related disasters. More than 15 million Americans live in counties that have averaged one or more weather-related disasters per year since the beginning of 2006. Ten U.S. counties–six in Oklahoma, two in Nebraska, and one each in Missouri and South Dakota–have each experienced ten or more declared weather-related disasters since 2006. South Carolina was the only state without a weather-related disaster since 2006.

The report did a nice job explaining the linkages between extreme weather events and climate change, and concluded, “The increasing evidence linking global warming to certain types of extreme weather events–underscored by the degree to which those events are already both a common and an extremely disruptive fact of life in the United States–suggests that the nation should take the steps needed now to prevent the worst impacts of global warming and to prepare for the changes that are inevitably coming down the road.”

Jeff Masters is co-founder of the Weather Underground. This piece was originally published at the WunderBlog.

NEWS FLASH

Women Account For About 15 Percent Of Congress | Women make up 50.7 percent of the U.S. population, but they only make up 15 percent of the Senate and 16.6 percent of the House, according to a Congressional Research Services report. This is an obvious increase from 1945, when no women served in the Senate and about 2 percent of House members were women, but the number of women has leveled off recently and even dropped slightly compared to the most recent Congress. As the GOP pursues policies that alienate women, it will be interesting to note how that affects the participation of women in politics.

Via Andrew Sullivan

Climate Progress

New Folk Music Video On Impact of Mountain Top Removal

The Ohio-based folk band Magnolia Mountain has just released a new music video documenting the environmental and human impact of mountaintop removal coal mining.

The song, “The Hand of Man,” was released as part of a new 21-track album with bands from Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia performing songs about protecting the Appalachian Mountains and surrounding communities from destructive coal mining practices.

Mountaintop removal mining is exactly what it sounds like: Explosives are used to to blow up mountains in order to access coal reserves, thus forcing rocks and soil into valleys and increasing concentrations of mercury and arsenic in water supplies. According to researchers from Washington State University and West Virginia University, communities located near mountaintop mining sites have seen double the amount of birth defects than the national rate. To date, almost 3,000 mountain ridges have been blown apart to access coal.

Watch the music video:

Read more

Economy

As Stock Market Crosses 13,000, Rep. Franks Says President Obama ‘Seems To Be Doing Everything He Can To Hold It Back’

MESA, Arizona — Rep. Trent Franks (R-AZ) refused to give President Obama any credit Wednesday for recent economic and business improvements in the country, arguing instead that “anyone who’s paying attention knows that this president has done irreparable harm to the economy.”

ThinkProgress spoke with Franks to get his thoughts on the recent stock market gains and what they say about Republican critiques that President Obama is supposedly “anti-business.” (The Dow Jones Industrial Average crossed 13,000 at points earlier this week after a low of 6,626 in March 2009.) The five-term Arizona congressman dismissed the notion that Obama’s policies could have aided the economic recovery. There’s “no question” that the economy is improving in spite of President Obama, Franks said. “It’s a strong country, but Mr. Obama seems to be doing everything he can to hold it back.”

KEYES: A lot of other folks might say that under [President Obama's] watch the stock market has gone up over 5,000 points. What do you think?

FRANKS: Anyone who’s paying attention knows that this president has done irreparable harm to the economy, at least in the short run. [...]

KEYES: So it sounds like [the economy's] improved in spite of President Obama?

FRANKS: No question about it. No question about it. It’s a strong country, but Mr. Obama seems to be doing everything he can to hold it back.

Watch it:

The stock market is not a good indicator of an ecnomy’s health, but even a cursory look other figures shows just how spurious the claim is that Obama has been “anti-business.” As ThinkProgress’ Pat Garofalo noted, “in 2011, corporate profits hit their highest level since 1950.” Unfortunately, these record corporate gains have not trickled down into workers’ pockets; workers’ wages and purchasing power has been largely stagnant, even as their bosses do better than they have in 60 years.

It goes without saying that Franks is no fan of President Obama’s. Last year, he told ThinkProgress in an interview that even he supported impeaching Obama over the White House’s opposition to the Defense of Marriage Act.

Still, Franks is not the only GOPer reluctant to give even a shred of credit to Obama. From the economic recovery to the deaths of Osama bin Laden and Muammar Qaddafi, Republicans have done all they can to ensure they can continue criticizing the president, regardless of the facts.

Politics

Arizona GOP House Candidate Compares Saddam Hussein’s Invasion Of Kuwait To President Obama

AZ-8 candidate Frank Antenori (R)

TUCSON, Arizona — Arizona congressional candidate Frank Antenori compared Barack Obama’s presidency to Saddam Hussein’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait, telling a Tea Party crowd this week to “imagine…having your country taken from you and then having to fight for it to get it back. We’re at that point here in this country.”

Antenori made the specious comparison in front of approximately 500 Arizonans on Wednesday at a Tucson Tea Party rally. He is the frontrunner for the GOP nomination to fill former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords’ (D-AZ) vacant eighth congressional district seat.

Discussing his background before entering politics, Antenori pointed to his service in Operation Desert Storm, noting that he helped train Kuwaitis “to liberate their own country after it had been taken from them by Saddam Hussein.” Antenori then continued on to compare Kuwait’s struggle against Hussein to the United States under President Obama: “Imagine that, having your country taken from you and then having to fight for it to get it back. We’re at that point here in this country.”

ANTENORI: Came back, turned around, by 18 went to Desert Storm. We helped train the Kuwaiti Liberation Brigade and lead the Kuwaitis into Kuwait City to liberate their own country after it had been taken from them by Saddam Hussein. Imagine that, having your country taken from you and then having to fight for it to get it back. We’re at that point here in this country.

Unfortunately, Antenori’s outrageous comparison was only the second most offensive comment made at the Tea Party event. Prior to his speech, Gabriela Mercer, a Republican candidate for Arizona’s 3rd congressional district, said that Rep. Raúl Grijalva’s (D-AZ) “allegiance is not to America.” Grijalva, a Latino congressman, was born in the United States and has served his state and country for decades.

Climate Progress

Open Thread, New Cartoon and a Request

Ten cyberpennies for your thoughts. But I’d like some real pennies in return for our new cartoonist, Stephanie McMillan:

Stephanie has kindly given me permission to reprint her cartoons. She notes that “cartoonists are struggling and economically collapsing along with the newspapers that used to be our living.”

So I said I’d post the link to Paypal where you can donate to her if you like her cartoons.  CLICK HERE (then click where it says donate).

If we can crowd-source her some support, perhaps she’ll even write a special cartoon just for Climate Progress readers.

She writes, “Code Green is the only weekly editorial cartoon focusing exclusively on the environmental emergency.” Here is some of her work on recent events:

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